different between annate vs agnate

annate

English

Etymology

See ann.

Noun

annate (plural annates)

  1. The first year's profits of a Catholic benefice, as traditionally paid directly to the Pope.
    • 2009, Hilary Mantel, Wolf Hall, Fourth Estate 2010, p. 342:
      When he brings into the Commons a bill to suspend the payment of annates to Rome, he suggests a division of the House.
  2. (Scotland, law) The half-year's stipend payable for the vacant half-year after the death of a parish minister, to which his family or nearest of kin have right under an act of 1672.

Italian

Noun

annate f

  1. plural of annata

Latin

Verb

ann?te

  1. second-person plural present active imperative of ann?

annate From the web:



agnate

English

Etymology

from Latin agn?tus (paternal kinsman).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?æ?ne?t/

Noun

agnate (plural agnates)

  1. A relative whose relation is traced only through male members of the family.
    A great-grandfather is an agnate if he is your father’s father’s father.
  2. Any paternal male relative.

Antonyms

  • enate

Translations

Adjective

agnate (comparative more agnate, superlative most agnate)

  1. Related to someone by male connections or on the paternal side of the family.
  2. allied; akin
    • Assume more or less of a fictitious character, but congenial and agnate [] with the former.
  3. (linguistics) Having a similar semantic meaning.

Synonyms

  • agnatic, patrilineal

Derived terms

  • agnatic
  • agnation

Translations

Anagrams

  • Gaetan, Teagan, negata

Latin

Noun

agn?te

  1. vocative singular of agn?tus

agnate From the web:

  • agnate meaning
  • what does magnate mean
  • what is agnate and cognate
  • what is agnate siblings
  • what dies innate mean
  • what is agnate brother
  • what do agnatha mean
  • what is agnaten se
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like