testudinate
English
Etymology 1
From Late Latin testūdinātus (“arched, vaulted”). By surface analysis, Latin testūdō (testūdin- in compounds) + -ate (adjective-forming suffix).
Adjective
testudinate (comparative more testudinate, superlative most testudinate)
- Of, like or relating to a tortoise.
- 2003: Fans of the testudinate pace and art-house vibe of writer-director Sally Potter — editorial review of the DVD The Man Who Cried, http://amazon.com
- Resembling a tortoise shell in appearance or structure; arched; vaulted.
Synonyms
Etymology 2
From a substantivation of the above adjective. Equivalent to Latin testūdō (testūdin- in compounds) + -ate (noun-forming suffix).
Noun
testudinate (plural testudinates)
- A turtle.
- 1880, Library of Universal Knowledge, volume IV. 454:
- Cope..enumerates.. 13 sea-saurians, 48 testudinates, and 50 sea serpents.