perforate
English
Etymology
From Latin perforō (“I bore or pierce through; I perforate”).
Pronunciation
-
Audio (US) (file)
Verb
perforate (third-person singular simple present perforates, present participle perforating, simple past and past participle perforated)
- (transitive) To pierce; to penetrate.
- (transitive) To make a line of holes in (a thin material) to allow separation at the line.
- to perforate a sheet of postage stamps
Troponyms
Derived terms
Translations
to pierce or penetrate
Adjective
perforate (not comparable)
- (philately, biology) perforated
- 1999 Nguyen Van Dzu and Peter C. Boyce. Kew Bulletin 54(2):379-393.
- A species of remarkable appearance with mature leaf laminae often so profoundly perforate as to resemble a fragile net of tissue.
- 1999 Nguyen Van Dzu and Peter C. Boyce. Kew Bulletin 54(2):379-393.
Translations
perforated — see perforated
Italian
Verb
perforate
Anagrams
Latin
Verb
perforāte
- second-person plural present active imperative of perforō
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