Lutetian
English
Etymology
From Lutetia + -an; geological sense coined by French geologist Albert de Lapparent in reference to the Paris Basin.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /luːˈtiːʃən/
- Rhymes: -iːʃən[1]
Adjective
Lutetian (comparative more Lutetian, superlative most Lutetian)
- Of or relating to ancient Lutetia.
- 2018, William Walton, Paris from the Earliest Period to the Present Day[2], volume 1:
- The activity of the Lutetian shippers and navigators covered the territory bathed by the Seine, the Marne, and the Oise, all of them quite navigable.
- (poetic, by extension) Parisian.
- 1989, Richard Howard, No Traveller[3], page 21:
- [...] not long before I took him to the Aerogare, he gave the last of his Lutetian homilies [...]
- (geology) Of or pertaining to the Lutetian.
- 1971, Bulletin of the Mineral Research and Exploration Institute of Turkey[4]:
- It is important to note that the Lutetian sediments occurring in the area under investigation were distinguished as limestone and flysch during previous studies also.
Translations
Noun
Lutetian (plural Lutetians)
- A native or inhabitant of Lutetia.
- 1964, Marcel Brion, Paris in Color[5], page 56:
- It is possible that, when they left their islands, a justifiable concern for their own safety in wartime led the Lutetians to settle at the points that were least exposed to aggression.
Translations
Proper noun
Lutetian
- (geology, paleontology) A subdivision of the Eocene epoch.
- 1921, Henry Woodward, Geological Magazine, volume 58, page 198:
- There are good reasons for believing that the “Paniselian” is a local shallow-water representative of the lower part of the Lutetian.
Translations
Translations