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Rugose Wrinkles Adjective Ruga Form Full Contexts Providence

Rugose means full of wrinkles or having a wrinkled appearance. The term is derived from the Latin word for 'wrinkle'.

Rugose (adjective) means full of wrinkles or having a wrinkled appearance. It comes from the Latin word 'ruga,' meaning 'wrinkle,' and is often used in technical or literary contexts.

Word rugose
Date January 8, 2016
Type adjective
Syllables ROO-gohss
Etymology Rugose was borrowed into English in the 15th century from the Latin adjective rugosus ("wrinkled"), which itself derives from ruga ("wrinkle"). One descendant of ruga that you'll probably recognize is corrugate, which initially meant "to form or shape into wrinkles or folds" (as in "corrugated cardboard"). Another, which might be more familiar to scientists, is rugulose, meaning "finely wrinkled." In addition, there is the noun rugosity, which can refer to either the quality or state of being full of wrinkles or to an individual wrinkled place. Rugose is most commonly encountered in technical contexts, but it's also found occasionally in literary contexts, as in our quote above, from the second-place winner in an H. P. Lovecraft short story contest in The Providence Journal.
Examples The leaves of the plant are dark green and rugose.

"I lost no time in asking directions of a stooped crone shuffling along the sleepy sidewalk, who turned her rugose visage towards me and shouted in a coarse and idiomatic form of French…." — John A. Minahan, The Providence (Rhode Island) Journal, 23 Aug. 2015
Definition 1 : full of wrinkles
2 : having the veinlets sunken and the spaces between elevated

Tags: wordoftheday::adjective

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