Palative vs Palatine - What's the difference?
palative | palatine |
(obsolete) Pleasing to the taste; palatable.
Of or relating to the Palatine Hill in Rome.
Of or relating to powers normally possessed by a sovereign but exercised by a lesser noble, or by a nominee of a sovereign.
Of or relating to a palace, particularly for the Eastern and Western Roman emperors.
Of or relating to a palatine or a palatinate, especially the Rhineland Palatinate.
A Roman soldier.
A Roman or Byzantine official.
A feudal lord (a count palatine or (m)) or a bishop possessing palatine powers.
A resident of a palatinate.
The highest dignitary in the former Kingdom of Hungary after the king.
(Palatine of Hungary)
Of or relating to the palate
Of or relating to a palatine bone.
As an adjective palative
is (obsolete) pleasing to the taste; palatable.As a proper noun palatine is
one of the seven hills of rome; the site of the earliest settlement.palative
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- Palative delights. — Sir T. Browne.