obrotund

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Borrowed from Latin obrotundus (somewhat round), from ob- (towards; against) +‎ rotundus. Analyzeable as ob- +‎ rotund.

Adjective[edit]

obrotund (not comparable)

  1. (literary, rare) Nearly but not completely round; roundish.
    • 1882, George W[ashington] Tryon Jr., Structural and Systematic Conchology: An Introduction to the Study of the Mollusca, volume I, page 268:
      It is a minute, perhaps juvenile shell, ten millimetres in length, obrotund, thin, not nacreous, equivalve, brown, hinge without teeth; foot rudimentary; fixed to rocks by a byssus.

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