different between exuvial vs exuviate
exuvial
English
Etymology
From Latin exuviae (“what is stripped”), from exuo (“shed, strip”)
Adjective
exuvial (not comparable)
- Related to something sloughed off or stripped away.
- The floor of the cave was covered with the exuvial remains of unknown creatures.
exuvial From the web:
- what does exuvial mean
exuviate
English
Etymology
From Latin exuviae (“what is shed”), from exu? (“cast off, strip”)
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /???zju?.v?.e?t/, /?k?su?.v?.e?t/
- (US) IPA(key): /?k?su?.v?.e?t/, /???zu?.v?.e?t/
- ,
Verb
exuviate (third-person singular simple present exuviates, present participle exuviating, simple past and past participle exuviated)
- (transitive, intransitive, rare) To shed or cast off a covering, especially a skin; to slough; to molt (moult).
Synonyms
- (to shed or cast off a covering): moult, molt, slough
Related terms
- exuviae
- exuvial
- exuviation
- exuvious
Translations
exuviate From the web:
- what does exudate mean
- what does exuviate
- exuviate meaning
- what is exudate mean
- is exudate good or bad
- what does exudate do
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