Exterminate
[ik-stur-muh-neyt] /ɪkˈstɜr məˌneɪt/
verb (used with object), exterminated, exterminating.
1.
to get rid of by destroying; destroy totally; extirpate:
to exterminate an enemy; to exterminate insects.
/ɪkˈstɜːmɪˌneɪt/
verb
1.
(transitive) to destroy (living things, esp pests or vermin) completely; annihilate; eliminate
v.
1540s, “drive away,” from Latin exterminatus, past participle of exterminare “drive out, expel, drive beyond boundaries,” also, in Late Latin “destroy,” from phrase ex termine “beyond the boundary,” from ex- “out of” (see ex-) + termine, ablative of termen “boundary, limit, end” (see terminus).
Meaning “destroy utterly” is from 1640s in English, a sense found in equivalent words in French and in the Vulgate; earlier in this sense was extermine (mid-15c.). Related: Exterminated; exterminating.
Read Also:
- Extermination
[ik-stur-muh-neyt] /ɪkˈstɜr məˌneɪt/ verb (used with object), exterminated, exterminating. 1. to get rid of by destroying; destroy totally; extirpate: to exterminate an enemy; to exterminate insects. /ɪkˈstɜːmɪˌneɪt/ verb 1. (transitive) to destroy (living things, esp pests or vermin) completely; annihilate; eliminate n. mid-15c., “repulsion;” 1540s, “utter destruction,” from Middle French extermination and directly from Latin […]
- Exterminator
[ik-stur-muh-ney-ter] /ɪkˈstɜr məˌneɪ tər/ noun 1. a person or thing that . 2. a person or business establishment specializing in the elimination of vermin, insects, etc., from a building, apartment, etc., especially by the controlled application of toxic chemicals. n. c.1400, “an angel who expells (people from a country),” from Late Latin exterminator, from Latin […]
- Exterminatory
[ik-stur-muh-nuh-tawr-ee, -tohr-ee] /ɪkˈstɜr mə nəˌtɔr i, -ˌtoʊr i/ adjective 1. serving or tending to .
- Extermine
[ik-stur-min] /ɪkˈstɜr mɪn/ verb (used with object), extermined, extermining. Obsolete. 1. to exterminate.
- Extern
[ek-sturn; for 3 also ik-sturn] /ˈɛk stɜrn; for 3 also ɪkˈstɜrn/ noun 1. a person connected with an institution but not residing in it, as a doctor or medical student at a hospital. 2. a nun of a strictly enclosed order, as the Carmelites, who resides inside the convent but outside its enclosure and who […]