Talk:assurgent

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Latest comment: 6 months ago by -sche in topic RFV discussion: May–December 2023
Jump to navigation Jump to search

RFV discussion: May–December 2023

[edit]

The following information has failed Wiktionary's verification process (permalink).

Failure to be verified means that insufficient eligible citations of this usage have been found, and the entry therefore does not meet Wiktionary inclusion criteria at the present time. We have archived here the disputed information, the verification discussion, and any documentation gathered so far, pending further evidence.
Do not re-add this information to the article without also submitting proof that it meets Wiktionary's criteria for inclusion.


Rfv-sense for the noun, "(heraldry) A man or beast rising out of the sea." I think it's only an adjective; compare WT:RFVE#aspectant. I'm listing this here rather than just changing the POS because (1) it's been listed as a noun for seventeen years, and (2) maybe someone will add a non-heraldic noun sense (searching for the plural suggests one might exist). - -sche (discuss) 16:41, 10 May 2023 (UTC)Reply

non-heraldic noun sense turns out to be existent but hard to attest, short of combing through every use of assurgent and hand-pick the non-adjectival ones out. For the general noun sense "one who rises", OED has just one quote from The Botanic Garden. I managed to find another quote, which amounts to two. I've added them to the entry.
Almost every English result of the form assurgents on GBook is a scanno, except the ones from the following source, which uses the word as a noun regularly:
  • 2021, Gino Zaccaria, The Enigma of Art: On the Provenance of Artistic Creation, Brill, →ISBN, page 295:
    Every assurgent is self-clearing: in assurgency, every assurgent disconceals itself as already constituted in itself and for itself.
But assurgency seems to be coined in this book specifically as a rendering of Ancient Greek φύσις.
The only other non-scanno GBook hit of assurgents is from a self-published book [1], which reads "an assurgents[sic] of life" with the meaning somewhat unclear. 蒼鳥 fawk. tell me if i did anything wrong. 15:48, 11 May 2023 (UTC)Reply
Failed; cites moved to cites page. - -sche (discuss) 19:32, 22 December 2023 (UTC)Reply