pestilential
adjective
No English definition recorded for this entry.
L314260 on Wikidata ↗Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ˌpɛstɪˈlɛnʃi.əl/ / /ˌpɛstɪˈlɛnʃəl/
adj
Etymology: From Latin pestilentialis, from pestilentia.
- Of or relating to pestilence or plague.
“1675, John Dryden, The Mistaken Husband, London: J. Magnes and R. Bentley, Act V, p. 63, What do you fear? Why do you shun me thus. […] I am not Pestilential, nor Leaprous.”
“[…] the Winter keen Pour’d out his Waste of Snows, and Summer shot His pestilential Heats:”
- Of or relating to pestilence or plague.
“A long sicknesse will weary friends at last; but a pestilentiall sicknes auerts them from the beginning.”
“[…] the miseries of famine were succeeded and aggravated by the contagion of a pestilential disease.”
- Of or relating to pestilence or plague.
“pestilential fever; pestilential sweating”
“The Scab, the Stench, and the Burning are terrible pestilential Symptoms,”
- Of or relating to pestilence or plague.
“Now this pestilentiall Summer being well spent, upon the approach of the Winter, and decrease of the Sicknesse, the King […] drawes nearer to the City of London,”
“They must expect more Pestilential times, That lives in th’ Equinoctial of their Crimes;”
- Having a harmful moral effect (especially one that is believed to spread in the manner of pestilence).
“But as the Poisons of the deadliest kind Are to their own unhappy Coasts confin’d, […] So Presby’try and Pestilential Zeal Can only flourish in a Common-weal.”
“By proclaiming individuals or entire societies to be damned, by treating their convictions as pestilential heresies, church and state had deliberately loosed fanaticism and savagery on often helpless men.”
- Causing irritation or annoyance.
“There’s the pestilential nuisances who write for autographs […] They’d none of ’em be missed!”
“1899, Joseph Conrad, Heart of Darkness in Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 165, March 1899, Chapter 2, p. 480, […] a species of wandering trader—a pestilential fellow, snapping ivory from the natives.”