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connate
[ kon-eyt ]
adjective
- existing in a person or thing from birth or origin; inborn:
a connate sense of right and wrong.
- associated in birth or origin.
- allied or agreeing in nature; cognate.
- Anatomy. firmly united; fused.
- Botany. congenitally joined, as leaves.
- Geology. trapped in sediment at the time the sediment was deposited:
connate water.
connate
/ ˈkɒneɪt /
adjective
- existing in a person or thing from birth; congenital or innate
- allied or associated in nature or origin; cognate
connate qualities
- Also calledcoadunate biology (of similar parts or organs) closely joined or united together by growth
- geology (of fluids) produced or originating at the same time as the rocks surrounding them
connate water
connate
/ kŏn′āt′,kŏ-nāt′ /
- Botany.Joined with a part or organ of the same kind, as leaves that are joined at the base.
- Botany.Compare adnate
Derived Forms
- ˈconnately, adverb
- ˈconnateness, noun
Other Words From
- connate·ly adverb
- connate·ness noun
- con·na·tion [k, uh, -, ney, -sh, uh, n], noun
- sub·connate adjective
- subcon·nation noun
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of connate1
Example Sentences
In a considerable proportion of insects it seems connate with the Labium, and forming its inner surface?
In most cases, however, the peridia are connate throughout, and sometimes present above a membranous common covering.
Their knowledge is connate and is called instinct; but it belongs to the natural love in which they are.
If by nature deaf, from the intonation of sounds; and many unhappy instances of such connate defects abound among our species.
Perianth subcompressed laterally, connate with the involucral leaves.
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