coaptate
English
Etymology
First attested in 1649; either a back-formation from coaptation or directly borrowed from Late Latin coaptātus, perfect passive participle of coaptō (see -ate (verb-forming suffix)), from co- + aptō (“to fasten”). Doublet of coapt.
Verb
coaptate (third-person singular simple present coaptates, present participle coaptating, simple past and past participle coaptated)
- (transitive, chiefly medicine) To join or attach.
- 1900, Henry Johns Berkley, A Treatise on Mental Diseases:
- Female patients sometimes tell us that another woman enters her body and coaptates herself to it, especially during the act of coitus.
Related terms
Spanish
Verb
coaptate