English

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Etymology

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Borrowed from Latin extensus.

Noun

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extense (plural extenses)

  1. (obsolete) extent; expanse
    • 1795, Emanuel Swedenborg, True Christian Religion:
      [] for God is not extended, but yet is every where in all Extense []
    • 1859, Thomas Lake Harris, The Herald of Light, volume 4, page 185:
      Nor canst thou cleave the crystal heaven
      To gather joys from thence;
      As fits thy life to thee is given
      The ocean's drear extense.

Adjective

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extense (comparative more extense, superlative most extense)

  1. (obsolete) Outreaching; expansive; extended, superficially or otherwise.

Usage notes

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  • May still be encountered in Indian English translations.

Latin

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Participle

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extēnse

  1. vocative masculine singular of extēnsus

References

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