Definition
Made smooth or polished like ivory, or processed to resemble ivory in appearance.
Etymology
From Latin ebur (ivory) + -atus (past participle suffix) + -ed. The root ebur comes from a Semitic language family, related to Hebrew 'shen' (tooth). Medieval craftsmen used this term to describe smoothing techniques.
Kelly Says
The word 'ivory' and 'ebur' come from ancient trade routes where African elephants were hunted—the linguistic trail of this word literally traces the path of medieval commerce!
Translations
ARالعربية
eburated
إيبوريتد
BNবাংলা
eburated
এব্যুরেটেড
CSČeština
eburated
e-byu-ra-tay-t
DADansk
eburated
e-byu-ray-ted
DEDeutsch
eburated
e-byu-ra-tay-t
ELΕλληνικά
eburated
εβυρατέ
ESEspañol
eburated
e-byu-ray-tay
FAفارسی
eburated
ایبوریتد
FISuomi
eburated
e-byu-ra-tay-tty
FRFrançais
eburated
e-byu-ray-te
HIहिन्दी
eburated
एब्यूरेटेड
HUMagyar
eburated
e-byu-ra-tay
IDBahasa Indonesia
eburated
eburated
ITItaliano
eburated
e-byu-ra-tay
MSBahasa Melayu
eburated
eburated
MYမြန်မာ
eburated
အေဘူရိယိတ
NLNederlands
eburated
e-byu-ray-teed
NONorsk
eburated
e-byu-ray-ted
PLPolski
eburated
eburated
PTPortuguês
eburated
e-byu-ra-tay
RORomână
eburated
e-byu-ra-tay
RUРусский
eburated
эбурейтед
SVSvenska
eburated
e-byu-ray-ted
SWKiswahili
eburated
eburated
TAதமிழ்
eburated
எபியூரேட்டட்
TEతెలుగు
eburated
ఎబ్యూరేటెడ్
TRTürkçe
eburated
eburete
UKУкраїнська
eburated
ебурейтед
VITiếng Việt
eburated
e-bu-ray-ted