immaculate
adjective
- perfectly clean
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ɪˈmækjʊlət/ / /ɪˈmæk.jʊ.lət/ / /ᵻˈmæk.jə.lət/
adj
Etymology: From Late Middle English immaculat, immaculate (“blameless; flawless, spotless; specifically of the Virgin Mary: pure, undefiled”), borrowed from Latin immaculātus (“unstained”), from im- (negative prefix) + maculātus (“stained, spotted; defiled, polluted; (figurative) dishonoured”), the perfect passive participle of maculō (“to spot, stain; to defile, pollute; (figurative) to dishonour”), from macula (“a blemish, spot, stain; (figurative) blot on one’s character, fault”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *smh₂-tló-m (“wiping (?)”), from *smeh₂- (“to rub; to smear”). The word displaced Middle English unwemmed (“pure, untainted”). See also -ate (adjective-forming suffix). By surface analysis, im- + macule + -ate. Cognates * Catalan immaculat * Italian immacolato, immaculato (obsolete) * Middle French immaculé (modern French immaculé) * Portuguese imaculado * Spanish inmaculado
- Having no blemish or stain; absolutely clean and tidy.
“O loyall Father, of a treacherous Sonne, / Thou ſheere immaculate and ſiluer Fountaine, / From vvhence this ſtreame, through muddy paſſages, / Hath held his current, and defild himſelfe.”
“So in immaculate clothes, and Symetrie / Perfect as circles, vvith ſuch nicetie / As a young Preacher at his firſt time goes / To preach, he enters, […]”
- Containing no mistakes; free from fault.
- Containing no mistakes; free from fault.
- Free from sin; morally pure; sinless.
“Take not thy flight ſo ſoone immaculate ſpirit.”
“Were but my ſoul as pure / From other guilts as that, Heaven did not hold / One more immaculate.”
- Of the Virgin Mary or her womb: pure, undefiled.
- Lacking blotches, spots, or other markings.