aberratory

English

Etymology

From aberrate + -oryCategory:English terms suffixed with -ory#ABERRATORY.

Adjective

aberratory (comparative more aberratory, superlative most aberratory)Category:English lemmas#ABERRATORYCategory:English adjectives#ABERRATORYCategory:English entries with incorrect language header#ABERRATORYCategory:Pages with entries#ABERRATORYCategory:Pages with 1 entry#ABERRATORY

  1. (rareCategory:English terms with rare senses#ABERRATORY) Of or pertaining to aberration; aberrant.
    • p. 1932 (written), Zelda Fitzgerald, “Other Names for Roses”, in The Collected Writings, New York, N.Y.: Charles Scribner's Sons, published 1991, →ISBN, page 366:
      There was enough of her family in Fedora for that last to sound improbable—another of those things to be assuaged, a sort of unaccountable temperamentality; not as bad as a drug addict but impolitely aberratory.
      Category:English terms with quotations#ABERRATORY
    • 1934 September 21, Charles Willis Thompson, “1934 and Political Change”, in The Commonweal, volume 20, number 21, New York, page 479:
      This was so acceptable an improvement on either “King Caucus” or the erratic and aberratory method of legislative or mass-meeting nominations that the parties adopted it for the Presidency as well as the Vice Presidency.
      Category:English terms with quotations#ABERRATORY
Category:English adjectives Category:English lemmas Category:English terms suffixed with -ory Category:English terms with quotations Category:English terms with rare senses Category:Pages with 1 entry Category:Pages with entries