immutate

English

Etymology

Latin immūtātus.

Adjective

immutate (comparative more immutate, superlative most immutate)

  1. (obsolete) unchanged
    • 1875, Godey's Lady's Book and Magazine:
      ... still holds immutate the wine of "lang syne?" Ye gods, leave it unchanged, I pray you, till I quaff at least ...
    • 1891, Karl Brugmann, A Comparative Grammar of the Indo-Germanic Languages: A Concise Exposition of the History of Sanskrit, Old Iranian ... Old Armenian, Greek, Latin, Umbro-Samnitic, Old Irish, Gothic, Old High German, Lithuanian and Old Church Slavonic, page 36:
      ... the immutate or unepithetised class, ...
    • 1913, The Agricultural Student, page 213:
      ... Whose laws immutate are.

References

Italian

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /im.muˈta.te/
  • Rhymes: -ate
  • Hyphenation: im‧mu‧tà‧te

Adjective

immutate

  1. feminine plural of immutato

Anagrams

Latin

Pronunciation

Participle

immūtāte

  1. vocative masculine singular of immūtātus