Penultimate
From Textus Receptus
(New page: ==Etymology== From Latin paenultimus, from paene (“almost”) + ultimus (“last”). /pɪˈnʌltɪmət/ Adjective penultimate (not comparable) (UK, in US usage usually formal, literar...) |
Current revision (16:06, 31 July 2015) (view source) (→Noun) |
||
Line 26: | Line 26: | ||
==Noun== | ==Noun== | ||
*penultimate (plural penultimates) | *penultimate (plural penultimates) | ||
- | |||
- |
Current revision
Contents |
Etymology
From Latin paenultimus, from paene (“almost”) + ultimus (“last”).
/pɪˈnʌltɪmət/ Adjective penultimate (not comparable)
(UK, in US usage usually formal, literary or scholarly) Next to last, second to last; immediately preceding the end of a sequence, list, etc. (linguistics) Of or pertaining to a penult. (mathematics, rare) Relating to or denoting an element of a related collection of curves that is arbitrarily close to a degenerate form. Usage notes[edit]
Synonyms
(immediately preceding the end of a list, sequence, etc.): next to last, next-to-last, second to last, second-to-last, second from last, second-from-last, second last, second-last, (now chiefly UK) last but one, last ~ but one
Coordinate terms
(adjectives denoting syllables): ultimate (last), antepenultimate (last but two), preantepenultimate (last but three), propreantepenultimate (last but four)
Derived terms
- antepenultimate
- penultimately
- preantepenultimate
- propenultimate
- propreantepenultimate
Related terms
- penult
- ultimate
Translations
- next-to-last in a sequence
Noun
- penultimate (plural penultimates)