释义 |
consanguinean, a. and n.|kɒnsæŋˈgwɪniːən| [f. as prec. + -an.] 1. = consanguineous; as n. a blood-relation.
1827Scott Napoleon viii. note, The consanguinean Saint Bonaventura. 1840Tait's Mag. VII. 409 An eagle, a legitimate consanguinean of the other imperial birds. 2. Roman Law. Related as children of the same father: opposed to uterine (of the same mother); pertaining to those so related. b. as n. A brother or sister by the same father.
1880Muirhead tr. Instit. Gaius iii. §23 Female agnates beyond the consanguinean degree of relationship. Ibid. 516 Consanguineans were just agnates of the first class. |