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Esture vs Aestiferous - What's the difference?

esture | aestiferous | Related terms |

Esture is a related term of aestiferous.


As a noun esture

is (obsolete) commotion.

As an adjective aestiferous is

(obsolete|not comparable) “turbulent]] as the tide”; “ebbing and flowing as the tide”an universal etymological english dictionary'' by [[w:nathan bailey|nathan bailey (1731), [http://booksgooglecouk/books?id=o-giaaaaqaaj&pg=pt28&dq=%22ebbing+and+flowing+as+the+tide%22&ei=-ooosuoeiafuygtlkuhcbw#v=onepage&q=%22ebbing%20and%20flowing%20as%20the%20tide%22&f=false page 28]
Æstiʹferous [''æstifer
, l] ebbing and flowing as the tide
.

esture

English

Noun

  • (obsolete) commotion
  • (Chapman)
    (Webster 1913)

    aestiferous

    English

    Alternative forms

    * (archaic) * estiferous

    Adjective

    (en adjective)
  • (obsolete, not comparable) “Turbulent]] as the tide”; “ebbing and flowing as the tide”.An Universal Etymological English Dictionary'' by [[w:Nathan Bailey, Nathan Bailey (1731), page 28]
    ÆSTI?FEROUS [''æstifer
    , L. ebbing and flowing as the tide.
  • * 1859 : John D. Bryant, M. D., Redemption, a Poem , page 241 (John Penington & Son)
  • Thus they, estiferous , the hollow sphere
    Within, rack’d, and raged against the Highest.
  • (comparable, chiefly, used figuratively) Producing much (aestival) heat.
  • * 1979 : J. Ron Stanfield, Economic Thought and Social Change , page 148 (Southern Illinois University Press; ISBN 0809309149, 9780809309146)
  • Moreover, if the analogy to political revolution teaches anything at all, its instruction would seem to be that revolution is a wasteful and excessively estiferous process.

    References