combatative

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From combat +‎ -ative. First attested in 1835.

Adjective[edit]

combatative (comparative more combatative, superlative most combatative)

  1. (proscribed) Uncommon form of combative.
    • 1835, [Mary Shelley], “Ugo Foscolo”, in Lives of the Most Eminent Literary and Scientific Men of Italy, Spain, and Portugal, volume 2, page 374:
      He frequented mostly the society of women; because he thought them more richly endowed by nature with pity and modesty, two pacific qualities which, he said, alone temper the combatative propensities of human beings.
    • 1860, Solon Robinson, How to Live: Saving and Wasting, or, Domestic Economy Illustrated, page 215:
      Some are loquacious; some are argumentative and religious; some are lascivious; some are excessively foolish; some are brutal, beastly, ugly, quarrelsome, wicked, combatative, murderous. Others are simply stupid.
    • 1910, Edith M. Patch, O. A. Johannsen, Apple Tree Insects of Maine, page 25:
      As this caterpillar is very readily dislodged, jarring the tree and killing the insect on the ground is a convenient combatative measure.
    • 1926, John Mersereau, The Whispering Canyon, page 41:
      Angus Cameron, he knew, was one of those unfortunates who are born with a sure knowledge of their constituted rights and the combatative zeal to defend them at any cost.
    • 1997, Anders Andersson, Runes: The Secrets of the Stones, →ISBN, page 31:
      When Tyr appears in a reading a competitive, not combatative character is suggested.
    • 2010, James Chambers, Footballers’ Haircuts: A New History, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, page 55:
      A combatative midfielder, his no-nonsense facial hair gives him the appearance of a gladiator looking for his next kill.

Usage notes[edit]

Though the form combatative is not of significantly later origin than combative, it is far less common and is now generally proscribed.