Cerean
English
    
    
Adjective
    
Cerean (not comparable)
- pertaining to Ceres
- 1892 (2007), Charles Leland, Etruscan Roman Remains, p. 233
- Pata'na was a Roman goddess who appears with greatly varied names, sometimes as a derivation from Ceres or a Cerean deity, and sometimes as Ceres herself.
 
- 1994 (2001), Hayford Peirce, "Six Million Solid Gold Belter Buckles", Jonathan White: Stockbroker in Orbit, Wildside Press, →ISBN, page 45
- Bouncing is something to be avoided in the low Cerean gravity: any bouncing here would have lifted me up against the café's green and white striped awning — and maybe on through it to interface violently with the 60 meters of carbonaceous chondrite rock that separate Clarkeville from the surface.
 
-  2012, Joop M. Houtkooper, Life on Earth and other Planetary Bodies, →ISBN, page 168:- If so, a commonality of Cerean life with Terran and possible Martian life ... could provide a strong corroboration of the "Ceres origin" hypothesis.
 
 
- 1892 (2007), Charles Leland, Etruscan Roman Remains, p. 233
Noun
    
Cerean (plural Cereans)
- A native or inhabitant of Ceres
-  1953, Isaac Asimov, Lucky Starr and the Pirates of the Asteroids:- "When they left, the men of Ceres counted their casualties. Fifteen Cereans were dead and many more hurt in one way or another, as against the bodies of five pirates."
 
-  1988, Everett Franklin Bleiler, Science-fiction: the Gernsback years, Kent State University Press, page 374:- "Traveling by etheric-magnetic means, the comrades soon reached Ceres, where they find a couple of corpses, but no living Cereans."
 
 
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