English

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Etymology

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Stem of ambiguous (Latin ambiguus) +‎ -ate.

Verb

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ambiguate (third-person singular simple present ambiguates, present participle ambiguating, simple past and past participle ambiguated)

  1. (transitive) To make more ambiguous.
    • 1993, Thomas N. Corns, The Cambridge Companion to English Poetry, Donne to Marvell:
      Marvell is as careful here to ambiguate the nature of his poem's speaker as he was in presenting the 'forward youth' of the 'Horatian Ode'.
    • 2013, Jean Kirsch, Murray Stein, How and Why We Still Read Jung: Personal and professional reflections:
      To ambiguate Jung means to read his texts as ambiguous, even when the statements they contain appear superficially unambiguous.
    • 2016, Richard Gilmore, Searching for Wisdom in Movies:
      Immediately then Socrates will give counterexamples to this definition, ambiguating the definition. Laches will define courage as standing firm in battle. Socrates will ask about whether a person can be courageous in sickness, in business, []

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Translations

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