different between subterranean vs cataphile

subterranean

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin subterraneus.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?s?bt???e?ni?n/
  • Hyphenation: sub?ter?ra?ne?an

Adjective

subterranean (comparative more subterranean, superlative most subterranean)

  1. below ground, under the earth, underground

Synonyms

  • subterraneous, subterrene, underground, hypogean

Related terms

  • terranean

Translations

subterranean From the web:

  • what's subterranean mean
  • what subterranean passage
  • what's subterranean river
  • subterranean what is the definition
  • subterranean what is the part of speech
  • what does subterranean mean
  • what are subterranean termites
  • what do subterranean termites look like


cataphile

English

Etymology

From French cataphile, equivalent to a blend of catacomb +? -phile.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?kæt?fa?l/

Noun

cataphile (plural cataphiles)

  1. A type of urban explorer who visits the ancient catacombs and quarries linked by tunnels beneath Paris.
    • 2004 October 13, Joelle Diderich, Police Play Cat & Mouse With New French Underground, in The Scotsman ([1]):
      Skilled cataphiles elude police by ducking into corridors or moving in the dark.
    • 2005, David L. Pike, Subterranean Cities: The World Beneath Paris and London, 1800-1945, page 176-177:
      "...a Prussian zombie, and a Polish lamia, the Countess Norodna, in the Left Bank carrières (top and bottom frame right). The artist is a former cataphile, and the series is replete with subterranean history and folklore. The dialogue..."
  2. (by extension) Any individual who explores subterranean quarries, mines, or catacombs.

Anagrams

  • caliphate, hepatical

cataphile From the web:

  • what does cataphile
  • what is a cataphile paris
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