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Vespertine vs Matutine - What's the difference?

vespertine | matutine | coordinate terms |

Matutine is a coordinate term of vespertine.



As adjectives the difference between vespertine and matutine

is that vespertine is of or related to the evening; that occurs in the evening while matutine is of or relating to early morning; occurring in the early morning; matutinal.

vespertine

English

Adjective

(-)
  • (poetic) Of or related to the evening; that occurs in the evening.
  • * 1837 , William Evans Burton (editor), Philadelphia in the Dog Days: An Incoherency'', ''Burton's Gentleman's Magazine and American Monthly Review , Volume 1: July—December, page 131,
  • The peripatetics issue forth to indulge in the usual vespertine locomotion; and stroll gently down the aristocratic Chesnut and up the sedate and solid-seeming Mulberry, or vice versa.
  • * 1999 , , Walter Borenstein (translator), The Tribune of the People , page 124,
  • Sovereign, majestic peace, joined to the spiritual isolation of the vespertine hour, rose up from those diaphanous, remote distances into the pure sky, where light little clouds, very much like bundles of cotton, scattered sparsely here and there, were tinged with gold.
  • * 2000 , , page 34,
  • 'I should be honoured, Ned. Truly honoured. Will you let me go upstairs and change into something a little more vespertine ?' He pointed mournfully at his speech day garb.
  • * 2004 , Catherine E. Rigby, Topographies Of The Sacred: The Poetics Of Place In European Romanticism , page 217,
  • Although in the published version of 1815, this sylvan scene of vespertine quietude does not refer to anywhere in particular, the poem was originally written in response to a specific place: on 6 September 1780 Goethe penciled it onto the wooden wall of a hunting hut on a forested hilltop, the Kickelhahn, near Ilmenau.
  • * 2011', John Lars Zwerenz, '''''Vespertine Fire'', ''Selected Poems , page 34,
  • As our ineffable ardor just begins, / All becomes fiery flames of desire; / Oh, welcome the dusk—and its vespertine fire!
  • (astrology, of a planet or star) That sets after the sun.
  • * 1822 , , 2002, page 44,
  • But, owing to the vespertine configuration of Jupiter and Mars, as well as the masculine condition of the anterior parts of the triplicity, and the feminine condition of its latter parts, the said nations regard women with scorn and indifference.
  • * 2004 , , Anthony Louis LaBruzza (translator), Astrologia Gallica , Book 18, page 56,
  • Finally, he[Ptolemy] says that the vespertine' or second stations of the planets, especially those posited in the I.C. [4th House], and in the case of Mercury and Venus, when they are ' vespertine in day charts but matutine in night charts, signify temperaments that are ingenious, capable of hard work, and able to discern arcane matters, such as are seen in the nativities of magicians, prestidigitators, dream interpreters, and so on.
  • (zoology, of an animal) That is principally active at dusk.
  • * 1949 , John Thomas Howell, Marin Flora , page 103,
  • In both forms of this interesting plant, the medium-sized spider-like flowers are closed from morning until late afternoon when they open to attract vespertine insects.
  • * 2011 , James D. Nichols, Camera Traps in Animal Ecology: Methods and Analyses , page 59,
  • In research involving American black bears Ursus americanus , Bridges et al. (2004b) recorded activity patterns at bait sites in Virginia and found bear activity was generally vespertine but exhibited seasonal differences with bears becoming more nocturnal in the fall, possibly in response to hunting seasons and possible pursuit by bear-hounds.
  • (botany) Occurring in the evening.
  • * 1993 , Verne Grant, Origin of floral isolation between ornithophilous and sphingophilous plant species, PNAS,
  • Similarly, the flowers of the sphingophilous taxa correspond to the characteristics and habits of western American hawkmoths in many ways: in ... vespertine and nocturnal nectar production
  • (botany, of a plant) That opens or blooms in the evening.
  • * 1818 , Thomas Nuttall, The Genera of North American Plants, and a Catalogue of the Species, to the Year 1817 , Volume 1, page 29,
  • Herbaceous; leaves alternate, pinnatifid, asperate; flowers large, terminal and solitary, vespertine , (or expanding towards sun-set,) not deciduous or marcescent after closing, but re-opening at the usual time for several days in succession, when closed involute in a cone;.
  • * 1883 , William Robinson, The English Flower Garden , 2011, page 184,
  • It[Mentzelia ornata ] belongs to the vespertine section, or those in which the flowers fully expand only towards evening.
  • * 2008 , Pat Mora, House of Houses , page 9,
  • I read of vespertine flowers, night bloomers like four o'clocks, opening like mouths in evening prayer.

    Coordinate terms

    * (l) * (astrology) (l)

    See also

    * (l) ----

    matutine

    English

    Adjective

    (-)
  • Of or relating to early morning; occurring in the early morning; matutinal.
  • * 1833', Captain Mundy, ''Pen and Pencil Sketches, from the Journal of a Tour in India'', quoted in '''1833 , ''Recent Travels in Upper India'', ''The Edinburgh Review, Or Critical Journal , Volume 57, page 362,
  • During a residence of nearly two years in Switzerland, the first object that my eyes opened upon every morning was the snow-clad summit of Mount Blanc; and I thought that a glorious sight. But the glaciers that now form, next to the Omnipotent Being who created them, my first objects of matutine contemplation, present a battalion of icy pinnacles, amogst which Mount Blanc, with its pitiful fifteen thousand feet, would scarcely be admitted in the rear rank!
  • (astrology) Before the sun (of the rising of a planet or star''); that rises before the sun (''of a planet or star ).
  • * 1817 , , The New and Complete Illustration of the Celestial Science of Astrology , Volume 2, Revised Edition, 1822 printing, page 1031,
  • If, at the time of the matutine' ?etting of the Dolphin, there be ?howers, there will be none at the ri?ing of Arcturus.The ' matutine ri?ing of the greater Dog begetteth heat, troubleth the ?eas, and changeth all things.
  • * 1975 , , Jean Rhys Bram (translator), Ancient Astrology Theory And Practice: Matheseos libri VIII , page 39,
  • Matutine' planets are those which in their rising precede the Sun.We must also know in what conditions the ' matutine star rejoices and in what the vespertine star rejoices, for they are protected in a favorable position whenever they precede the Sun.
  • * 1990 , George Noonan, Fixed Stars and Judicial Astrology , page 14,
  • The star indicates much trouble for the native in whose chart it is matutine' rising or setting, but if the aspect is ' matutine culmination Arcturus brings riches and honor.

    Synonyms

    * matutinal

    Coordinate terms

    * vespertine * (that rises before the sun) vespertine