English edit

Etymology edit

From Late Latin rinatrix (in Bartholomaeus Anglicus), apparently a misreading of Lucan 9.720 et natrix (and the water snake).

Noun edit

rinatrix

  1. (obsolete) A type of water snake formerly thought to poison water. [14th–19th c.]
    • 1567, John Maplet, A Greene Forest:
      Rinatrix is a Serpent which with enuenoming poysoneth ye water, so that into what cleare Fountaine or Riuer he swimmeth, he infecteth it.
    • 1613, John Marston, William Barksted, The Insatiate Countess, I.1:
      Mountebank with thy pedantical action, / Rinatrix, bugle-ox, rhinoceros.