apocopate
English
Etymology
From Latin apocopātus (“cut off”), from Ancient Greek ἀποκόπτω (apokóptō, “cut off”).
Adjective
apocopate (not comparable)
Synonyms
- (shortened by apocope): apocopic, clipped, shortened, abbreviated
Translations
Verb
apocopate (third-person singular simple present apocopates, present participle apocopating, simple past and past participle apocopated)
- (linguistics) To shorten using apocope; to remove the final sound or syllable.
- 1904, Robert Sterling, A Grammar of the Arabic Language, London: K. Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co, OCLC 3088363, page 229:
- The particles which apocopate the final vowel of the aorist are of two kinds: I. Those which apocopate the final vowel of one verb only. II. Those which apocopate the final vowel of two verbs.
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- (linguistics, intransitive) To undergo apocope.
- 1999, The Best Test Preparation for the SAT II, Subject Test: Spanish, Piscataway, NJ: Research & Education Association, →ISBN, page R-195:
- "Ciento" apocopates to "cien" before nouns or numbers larger than itself.
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Related terms
Italian
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