different between vicariant vs vicarian
vicariant
English
Etymology
From German vikarierend, present participle of vikarieren (“to act as a substitute”), from Vikar (“vicar, representative”), ultimately from Latin vic?rius (“substitute”).
Adjective
vicariant (not comparable)
- Of, relating to, or as a result of vicariance
Noun
vicariant (plural vicariants)
- Any of a set of species, in separate geographical locations, that have arisen through vicariance
Anagrams
- Arvanitic
vicariant From the web:
- what is vicariant speciation
- what are vicariant events
- what does vicariant
- what means vicariant
vicarian
English
Noun
vicarian (plural vicarians)
- (obsolete) A vicar.
- 1598, John Marston, The Scourge of Villanie
- Shall Balbus, the demure Athenian,
Dreame of the death of next Vicarian?
- Shall Balbus, the demure Athenian,
- 1598, John Marston, The Scourge of Villanie
References
- vicarian in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
Anagrams
- variacin
vicarian From the web:
- what is vicariance in biology
- what is vicariance biogeography
- what is vicariant speciation
- what does vicariance mean in biology
- what does vicariance mean
- what is vicariance in ecology
- what are vicariant events
- what is vicariance theory
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- vicariant vs vicarian
- mode vs mixolydian
- mode vs lydian
- effeminate vs lydian
- hypomixolydian vs lydian
- mixolydian vs lydian
- neutrophilia vs neutrophilic
- tongue vs tonguedness
- unspoken vs untongued
- tonguedom vs taxonomy
- untongue vs untongued
- tongued vs tongues
- untongued vs untongues
- sharptongued vs logical
- tonguedom vs tongue
- percussionist vs taxonomy
- minums vs minims
- minimal vs minumum
- towheaded vs taxonomy
- towheads vs bowheads