English edit

Adjective edit

pulsant (not comparable)

  1. pulsing
    • 1679, Robert Hooke, Lectiones Cutlerianae, Or a Collection of Lectures, Londres: John Martyn, page 106:
      And although Sack had been formerly very familiar to him, he was now forced to shun it, and all strong Drinks, because they would infallibly produce a Cardialgia, a pulsant throbbing of the Heart, and labouring in his Breast: []
    • 2014, Karl Edward Wagner, Bloodstone:
      Like a ribbon of clotting blood, even the stones of the causeway radiated with pulsant light. Through the fog she could see hulking shapes that shambled along the uncanny roadway, dark shadows against the crimson radiance.

Anagrams edit

Latin edit

Verb edit

pulsant

  1. third-person plural present active indicative of pulsō

Piedmontese edit

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

pulsant m

  1. button (to be pushed)

Romanian edit

Etymology edit

From pulsa +‎ -ant.

Adjective edit

pulsant m or n (feminine singular pulsantă, masculine plural pulsanți, feminine and neuter plural pulsante)

  1. pulsating

Declension edit