English edit

Etymology edit

From Latin praedatorius, equivalent to predatory +‎ -ous.

Adjective edit

predatorious (comparative more predatorious, superlative most predatorious)

  1. predatory
    • 1659, John Gauden, Ἰερα Δακρυα. Ecclesiæ Anglicanæ Suspiria. The tears, sighs, complaints, and prayers of the Church of England, London: R. Royston, page 495:
      ...the hills of the robbers, predatorious oppreſſors of true Religion, pillagers and ſpoilers of the Church of Chriſt, of which too many ſad inſtances have been in ancient and later daies both at home and abroad.
    • 1968 July 5, Pesticides Documentation Bulletin, volume 4, number 1, page 16:
      Larvae that live a predatorious way of life, building neither living spaces nor nets, have smaller salivary glands, and their tiny nuclei are of exceptional significance.