Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- transitive verb To give a sketchy outline of.
- transitive verb To prefigure indistinctly; foreshadow.
- transitive verb To disclose partially or guardedly.
- transitive verb To overshadow; shadow or obscure.
from The Century Dictionary.
- To overshadow; partially darken or conceal.
- Figuratively, to give a faint shadow or resemblance of; outline or shadow forth; foreshadow; prefigure.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- transitive verb To give a faint shadow or slight representation of; to outline; to shadow forth.
- transitive verb To overshadow; to shade.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- verb To
foreshadow vaguely . - verb To give a vague
outline . - verb To
obscure orovershadow .
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- verb describe roughly or briefly or give the main points or summary of
- verb give to understand
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
Support
Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word adumbrate.
Examples
-
Adumbrated – from adumbrate (always used in conjunction with an object)
-
And, since Ezra Levant was mentioned, let me note that his own attitudes in this respect, and those of his wretched hangers-on, adumbrate the fate of the disabled under Flanagan's cure-all free enterprise regime.
Archive 2009-05-01 2009
-
All that I can think of as a remedy is benign neglect, which is an easier policy to adumbrate than to carry out.
Russia 2009
-
All that I can think of as a remedy is benign neglect, which is an easier policy to adumbrate than to carry out.
Eastern Europe 2009
-
And just as the fish and the reptile glimmeringly adumbrate man, so do these yearnings and desires adumbrate what man in himself calls "love," spelled all out in capitals.
-
Historically, they adumbrate a business consolidation phase coming as well as a stall in stock market momentum.
-
Hence, there was not really any late modem triumph of science over magic, so much as there was a natural dissolution of the latter into the former, as the power of science to accomplish what magic could only adumbrate became progressively more obvious.
-
Hence, there was not really any late modem triumph of science over magic, so much as there was a natural dissolution of the latter into the former, as the power of science to accomplish what magic could only adumbrate became progressively more obvious.
-
Right or wrong, though, it is the nature of the appeal that the ads adumbrate that leaves me as distressed now as it did several hours ago.
You report: Promotional Posters for the Traditional Latin Mass 2009
-
Allow me to adumbrate the hair-splitter in denials (hid) contribution to this thread.
On Thursday, the Legg report will be published along with... 2008
brtom commented on the word adumbrate
"What adumbrates the neural coagulate, still sending its runners off, fetchingly, here and there."
John Latta, Isola di Rifiuti
January 26, 2007
milosrdenstvi commented on the word adumbrate
A fancy way of saying 'sketch out' or something of the sort
December 20, 2009
qms commented on the word adumbrate
Some there are who boldly state
And scholars plainly explicate,
But others prefer
To hint and refer
And by indirection adumbrate.
September 27, 2014
vendingmachine commented on the word adumbrate
To prefigure indistinctly; foreshadow.
June 24, 2015