English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From leuco- +‎ -derm.

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

leucoderm (plural leucoderms)

  1. A person with white or light skin; a person belonging to a light-skinned race[1]
    • 1894 March 10, G. L. Magruder, C. W. Stiles, “An Extreme Case of Leucoderma in a Negro, with a Comparison of Similar Conditions in Various Animals”, in Medical Record: A Weekly Journal of Medicine and Surgery, volume 45, number 10 (whole 1218), New York, N.Y.: William Wood & Company, page 298:
      These characters must, however, have begun as individual variations, and there is no reason to doubt that if systematic breeding experiments were kept up for a sufficiently long period, with albinoes or leucoderms, or if these characters came into play in natural or sexual selection, races of albinoes or leucoderms in the human species could be established.
    • 1924, A[lfred] C[ort] Haddon, The Races of Man and Their Distribution, Cabridge: at the University Press, page 7:
      It is also admitted that these gradations in colour have a protective value; in the case of the melanoderms against the actinic rays of the sun and in that of the leucoderms against cold, since white is the best colour for keeping in the heat of the body.
    • 1942, Edgard Roquete Pinto, “Contributions to the Anthropology of Brazil”, in Proceedings of the Eighth American Scientific Congress, volume II, Washington, D.C., pages 241–242:
      [] I adopted the following terms for every anthropological group: (a) Leucoderms—men of white skin, rather brownish (no. 10-19 of von Luschen’s scale) black hair and wavy, (kymatotrichs) brown or black eyes, medium height, brachycephalian, leptorrhinian. The Brazilian leucoderms present two types of height: 1 m,63 and 1 m,69.
    • 1955, Impact of Science on Society, pages 146–147:
      Dark-skinned peoples (melanoderms) are, as a rule, more resistant to this parasite than the fair-skinned peoples (leucoderms). [] In the case of malaria, we have already noted the differentiation between the leucoderms and melanoderms.

Translations edit

References edit

Romanian edit

Etymology edit

Borrowed from French leucoderme.

Adjective edit

leucoderm m or n (feminine singular leucodermă, masculine plural leucodermi, feminine and neuter plural leucoderme)

  1. leucodermic

Declension edit

References edit

  • leucoderm in Academia Română, Micul dicționar academic, ediția a II-a, Bucharest: Univers Enciclopedic, 2010. →ISBN