English

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Verb

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perviate (third-person singular simple present perviates, present participle perviating, simple past and past participle perviated)

  1. (transitive, archaic) To penetrate.
    • 1840, Thomas Travers Burke, The Accoucheur's Vademecum, page 214:
      He acts thus until he leave so much of the cranium cut away, or perforated, as he judges will enable compression to contract the head into a sufficiently small compass to perviate the pelvis.
  2. (transitive, archaic) To spread or permeate throughout.
    • 1856, Gabriel Ferry, Vagabond Life in Mexico, page 264:
      The woods, perviated every where with paths, unhappily afforded us no new traces, and we much feared that the robbers had divided their plunder, and gone off in a different direction.