cereous

English

Etymology

From Latin cēreus, from cēra (wax).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈsɪəɹiəs/
  • Homophone: serious

Adjective

cereous (comparative more cereous, superlative most cereous)

  1. (obsolete) waxen; waxy; like wax
    • 1654, Edmund Gayton, Pleasant notes upon Don Quixot:
      at night he [the bee] stores up his dayes gatherings, and what is worth his observation, goes into his cereous Tables, and what is not, pasles away at supper for Table-talke

References

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