haedine

English

Etymology

From the Latin haedīnus (kidlike), from haedus (kid, young goat); compare caprine, hircine. Cognate with native English goaten.

Pronunciation

Adjective

haedine (not comparable)

  1. (rare, humorous) Resembling in form or exhibiting the behaviour typical of a kid (i.e., a juvenile goat); compare caprine, hircine.
    • 1914: University of Illinois (Urbana-Champaign campus), The Illio, volume 20, page 70
      Then there was an old-clothes man of Hebraic origin ; a fully-costumed darkey waiter, dispensing delicious liquors from a tray ; countless clowns and placarded unfathomables ; a poor, droning blind man ; a midnight reveller with the essential lamp post ; a valiant huntsman ; an escaped convict, № 27395 ; and — not least by any means — a goat. It was a real goat, real enough to have balking and butting tendencies. Ted Fritchey had him in charge, and underwent many a harrowing experience with his haedine protégé. This goat was intended to be prophetic of a victory over Chicago on the morrow — a capture of Chicago’s goat. Of the fulfillment of the prophecy, more hereafter. It is enough to say that on this afternoon our minds were all overborne with anxiety, and our hearts were all tight with goatish desire.

See also


Latin

Adjective

haedīne

  1. vocative masculine singular of haedīnus
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