tonitruate
English
    
    Etymology
    
From the past participle stem of Latin tonitruare (“to thunder”), from tonitrus (“thunder”).
Pronunciation
    
- IPA(key): /təˈnɪtɹʊeɪt/
Verb
    
tonitruate (third-person singular simple present tonitruates, present participle tonitruating, simple past and past participle tonitruated)
- (rare, intransitive) To thunder.
-  1733 August, The Gentleman's Magazine, page 412:- […] yet through the caliginous sublimity of internexed conundrums, tonitruating with obstreperous cadencies, you rather obfuscate than illuminate our A-b-c-darian conceptions […]
 
-  1980, Anthony Burgess, Earthly Powers:- Stertile thunder tonitruated terribly. ‘Oh Lord forgive us our bloody sins.’ Rain now pelted. It was hard work finding a taxi.
 
 
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