venatorial
English
Etymology
From Latin vēnātōrius (“of or pertaining to a hunter or the chase”), from vēnātor (“hunter”), from vēnor (“hunt, chase”).
Adjective
venatorial (not comparable)
- Of, pertaining to or involved in hunting or the chase.
- 1854, Richard Owen, Robert Gordon Latham, Edward Smith, William Sweetland Dallas, Orr's Circle of the Sciences, Volume 1, page 323:
- Contrast these two tribes with their neighbours of the south and west—with the Ugrians of the leveller country and the alluvial soils on the Viatka and Kama, and we see the difference between a life of agriculture and a life of venatorial activity
Synonyms
- (of or pertaining to hunting): venatic
Related terms
- venatic
- venatical
- venatically
- venation
- venatious
- venery
Translations
venatic — see venatic
Anagrams
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