出典:Wiktionary
The adjective is derived from French incarnadin, incarnadine, from Italian incarnadino, a variant of incarnatino (“carnation; flesh colour”), from incarnato (“embodied, incarnate”) + -ino (suffix forming adjectives denoting composition, colour, または other qualities). Incarnato is derived from Ecclesiastical Latin and Late Latin incarnātus (“having been made incarnate”),[1] the perfect passive participle of incarnō (“to become または make incarnate; to make into flesh”), from in- (suffix meaning ‘in, inside, within’) + Latin carō (“flesh, meat; body”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *(s)ker- (“to cut off”)) + -ō (suffix forming regular first-conjugation verbs).
The noun and verb are derived from the adjective.[1][2][3]
Adjective senses 2 and 3 (“of the blood-red colour of raw flesh; (figurative) bloostained, bloody”) and noun sense 2 (“blood-red colour of raw flesh”) are due to William Shakespeare’s use of the word as a verb in Macbeth (c. 1606): see the quotation below.[1][2]
incarnadine (comparative more incarnadine, superlative most incarnadine) (archaic, literary)
incarnadine (countable かつ uncountable, 複数形 incarnadines) (archaic, literary)
incarnadine (三人称単数 現在形 incarnadines, 現在分詞 incarnadining, 過去形および過去分詞形 incarnadined) (archaic, literary)
動詞の活用形:
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