testate
English
Etymology 1
From Latin testātus (“testified”), perfect passive participle of testor (“I am witness, testify, attest; I make a will”), from testis (“witness”).
Adjective
testate (not comparable)
Translations
having left a legally valid last will and testament
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Noun
testate (plural testates)
- (law) one who has left a valid will and testament
Translations
one who has left a valid will and testament
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Etymology 2
Adjective
testate (not comparable)
- (zoology) Having a test (external calciferous shell or endoskeleton)
- Synonyms: testacean, testaceous
- 2010, Valentyna Krashevska, Mark Maraun, Stefan Scheu, “Micro-and macroscale changes in density and diversity of testate amoebae of tropical montane rain forests of Southern Ecuador”, in Acta Protozoologica, volume 49, number 1:
- High frequency of species with acrostomy, eg species of the genera Euglypha, Assulina and Nebela, supports the conclusion that humidity is a major structuring force for testate amoebae at TH III.
Italian
Etymology 1
Noun
testate f
- plural of testata
Etymology 2
Verb
testate
- inflection of testare:
- second-person plural present indicative
- second-person plural imperative
Etymology 3
Participle
testate f pl
- feminine plural of testato
Anagrams
Latin
Participle
testāte
- vocative masculine singular of testātus
Spanish
Verb
testate