Ravennate
See also: ravennate
English
Etymology 1
From Ravenna + -ate (adjective-forming suffix); an anglicized form of Italian ravennate and Latin Ravennās through incorrectly associated endings (see Latin -ās).
Adjective
Ravennate (comparative more Ravennate, superlative most Ravennate)
- Of, from, or concerning Ravenna, a major city in Italy.
- 1958, Pieter Singelenberg, “The Iconography of the Etschmiadzin Diptych and the Healing of the Blind Man at Siloe”, in Art Bulletin:
- He held at first that this work had originated from a Ravennate workshop.
Synonyms
Etymology 2
From a substantivation of the above adjective. Equivalent to Ravenna + -ate (noun-forming suffix).
Noun
Ravennate (plural Ravennates)
- (rare) One of the Ravennese: a native or inhabitant of Ravenna in Italy.
- 1980, Dragmalogia of Giovanni da Ravenna on the Preferable Way of Life, volume 7:
- ...shortly after he arrived in his adopted city the signore Guido II da Polenta appointed Giovanni as one of the Ravennates who served as foreign notaries at the podesla's court in Florence.
Latin
Adjective
Ravennāte
- vocative masculine singular of Ravennātus