English edit

Etymology edit

From the Latin flātīvus, from flō (I blow).

Pronunciation edit

Adjective edit

flative (comparative more flative, superlative most flative)

  1. (obsolete, Early Modern, rare) Producing farts; flatulent.
    • 1599, Henry Butts, Dyets dry dinner:
      Artichokes [] Please the taste: prouoke vrine and Venus: remoue flatiue humours: open obstructions: heate the entralls.
    • 1607, Antony Brewer, Lingua:
      Eat not too many of those apples, they be very flative.
    • 1659, Edmund Gayton, “XXX. Of Herbs and Plants”, in The art of longevity, page 63:
      What though [cabbage is] windy, Pepper will reform that tempest, and appease its flative storm.