different between rubific vs rubify
rubific
English
Etymology
From Latin ruber (“red”) + facere (“to make”).
Adjective
rubific (comparative more rubific, superlative most rubific)
- (obsolete) Making red.
- 1868, Robert Williams Buchanan, David Gray and other Essays, chiefly on Poetry
- The silent skies with strange fire, like a dawn Rubific
- 1868, Robert Williams Buchanan, David Gray and other Essays, chiefly on Poetry
rubific From the web:
rubify
English
Alternative forms
- rubefy
Etymology
From French rubéfier.
Verb
rubify (third-person singular simple present rubifies, present participle rubifying, simple past and past participle rubified)
- (rare, transitive) to make red; to cause to redden
- (rare, intransitive) to redden; to become red
- waters rubifying
Related terms
- rubicund
- rubific
- rubric
rubify From the web:
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