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Ruinate vs Quinate - What's the difference?

ruinate | quinate |

As a verb ruinate

is to reduce to ruins; to destroy.

As an adjective quinate is

(botany|of a compound leaf) featuring five growing from a single point; (l).

As a noun quinate is

(chemistry) an (l) or a (l) of (l).

ruinate

English

Verb

(ruinat)
  • To reduce to ruins; to destroy.
  • * 1590 , Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene , III.viii:
  • Towres, Cities, Kingdomes ye would ruinate , / In your auengement and dispiteous rage […].
  • *, New York Review of Books, 2001, p.51:
  • as in lust, [animals] covet carnal copulation at set times, men always, ruinating thereby the health of their bodies.
  • To fall; to tumble.
  • Anagrams

    * * *

    quinate

    English

    Etymology 1

    First attested in 1760; from the post-Classical (etyl) .

    Adjective

    (-)
  • (botany, of a compound leaf) Featuring five growing from a single point; (l).
  • * 1760 , James Lee, An Introduction to Botany, Containing an Explanation of the Theory of That Science, and an Interpretation of Its Technical Terms, Extracted from the Works of Linnæus , book 3, chapter 6, page 183
  • They are termed Binate, Ternate, or Quinate , growing two, three, or five together, according to the number of Folioles, of which the digitate Leaf consists.

    References

    * “ quinate, a.'']” listed in the '' [2nd ed., 1989 * “ quinate, adj.'']” listed in the ''Oxford English Dictionary [3rd ed., December 2007

    Etymology 2

    First attested in 1810; either , in either case perhaps after the (etyl) quinquinate; compare the (etyl) kinate, quinate.

    Alternative forms

    * (l)

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • (chemistry) An (l) or a (l) of (l).
  • * 1810 , Thomas Thomson, A System of Chemistry (4th ed.), volume 3, page 106
  • Kinates'. Hitherto only one species of this genus of salts has been examined, the ' kinate of lime, which exists in a species of Peruvian bark.
    References
    * “ quinate, n.'']” listed in the ''Oxford English Dictionary [2nd ed., 1989 * “ quinate, n.'']” listed in the ''Oxford English Dictionary [3rd ed., December 2007 ----