different between estuate vs estuated

estuate

English

Etymology

From Latin aestuare (to be in violent motion, to boil up, burn), from aestus (boiling or undulating motion, fire, glow, heat), akin to Ancient Greek [Term?] (to burn). See ether.

Verb

estuate (third-person singular simple present estuates, present participle estuating, simple past and past participle estuated)

  1. (transitive) To boil up; to swell and rage; to be agitated.
    • 1614, Francis Bacon, speech [] [about the] Undertakers
      these vapours were not gone up to the head , howsoever they might glow and estuate in the body

estuate From the web:



estuated

English

Verb

estuated

  1. simple past tense and past participle of estuate

Anagrams

  • Audettes

estuated From the web:

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