semperidentical
English
Etymology
A calque of the Latin phrase semper īdem (“always the same”): semper- + identical.
Pronunciation
Adjective
semperidentical (not comparable)
- (rare nonce word) Remaining always the same; unvarying with the passage of time.
- 1820–1847: Thomas Griffiths Wainewright [aut.] and William Carew Hazlitt [ed.], Essays and Criticisms, page 98 (1880 publication)
- That perfectly semperidentical display of idiosyncratic egotism which runs through…all his varieties.
- 1820–1847: Thomas Griffiths Wainewright [aut.] and William Carew Hazlitt [ed.], Essays and Criticisms, page 98 (1880 publication)
References
- “semper-identical a.” defined as a derived term of the prefix “‖semper-”, listed in the Oxford English Dictionary [2nd Ed.; 1989]