palatine

adj
/ˈpæl.ə.taɪn/UK/ˈpæl.əˌtaɪn/US

Etymology

From late Middle English palatyne, from Old French palatin, from Medieval Latin palātīnus (“relating to the palace”), from palātium (“palace”) + -īnus (“-ine”, adjectival suffix). Doublet of paladin.

  1. derived from palātīnus
  2. derived from palatin
  3. inherited from palatyne

Definitions

  1. (of an official or feudal lord) Having local authority and possessing royal privileges…

    (of an official or feudal lord) Having local authority and possessing royal privileges that elsewhere belongs only to a sovereign.

  2. Of or relating to a palace especially of a Roman or Holy Roman Emperor.

  3. Synonym of palatial.

  4. + 12 more definitions
    1. Ellipsis of count palatine, a feudal lord or a bishop possessing palatine powers.

    2. A palace official, especially in an imperial palace.

    3. Ellipsis of county palatine.

    4. The Roman soldiers of the imperial palace.

    5. A fur cape or stole worn by women, which covers the neck and shoulders.

    6. Of or relating to the palate or to a palatine bone.

      • They strive to astonish the most sophisticated taste, the only applause they seek is the thick sound of the satisfied tongue clapping the palatine papillae.
    7. Ellipsis of palatine bone.

    8. One of the seven hills of Rome

      One of the seven hills of Rome; the site of the earliest settlement.

    9. A placename.

    10. The Rhine Franconian dialect spoken in the Palatinate.

    11. Pertaining to the Elector Palatine or the German Palatinate or its people.

      • Internally, the Palatine government remained dominated by Calvinists who bullied the largely Lutheran population, persecuted Jews and refused dialogue with Catholics.
    12. A native or inhabitant of the Palatinate.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for palatine. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA