English edit

Etymology edit

From Latin exuviae (what is shed), from exuō (cast off, strip).

Pronunciation edit

  • (UK) IPA(key): /ɪɡˈzjuː.vɪ.eɪt/, /ɛkˈsuː.vɪ.eɪt/
  • (US) IPA(key): /ɛkˈsuː.vɪ.eɪt/, /ɛɡˈzuː.vɪ.eɪt/
  • (file)
    ,
    (file)

Verb edit

exuviate (third-person singular simple present exuviates, present participle exuviating, simple past and past participle exuviated)

  1. (transitive, intransitive, rare) To shed or cast off a covering, especially a skin; to slough; to molt (moult).
    • 1996, Rolf Ludvigsen, chapter 4, in Life in Stone: A Natural History of British Columbia's Fossils, →ISBN, page 55:
      Like any arthropod encased in a rigid exoskeleton, a trilobite must periodically moult, or exuviate, in order to grow.
    • 2002, Bhikhu C. Parekh, Rethinking Multiculturalism: Cultural Diversity and Political Theory, →ISBN, page 344:
      Although multicultural societies are difficult to manage, they need not become a political nightmare and might even become exciting if we exuviate our long traditional preoccupation with a culturally homogeneous and tightly structured polity and allow them instead to intimate their own appropriate institutional forms, modes of governance, and moral and political virtues.

Synonyms edit

Related terms edit

Translations edit