Rubricate — Ru bri*cate, a. [L. rubricatus p. p. of rubricare to color red. See {Rubric}, n.] Marked with red. Sp?lmman. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Rubricate — Ru bri*cate, v. t. To mark or distinguished with red; to arrange as in a rubric; to establish in a settled and unchangeable form. Foxe. [1913 Webster] A system . . . according to which the thoughts of men were to be classed and rubricated forever … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
rubricate — index embellish Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
rubricate — [ro͞o′brə kāt΄] vt. rubricated, rubricating [< L rubricatus, pp. of rubricare, to redden < rubrica: see RUBRIC] 1. to mark, color, or illuminate (a book, etc.) with red; write or print in red letters 2. to provide with or regulate by… … English World dictionary
rubricate — transitive verb ( cated; cating) Date: 1570 1. to write or print as a rubric 2. to provide with a rubric • rubrication noun • rubricator noun … New Collegiate Dictionary
rubricate — verb a) To write in the form of a rubric b) To create rubrication … Wiktionary
rubricate — ru·bri·cate || ruËbrɪkeɪt v. supply with rubrics; arrange as a rubric; make rules or guidelines for something … English contemporary dictionary
rubricate — [ ru:brɪkeɪt] verb chiefly historical add elaborate, typically red, capital letters or other decorations to (a manuscript). Derivatives rubrication noun rubricator noun Origin C16: from L. rubricat , rubricare mark in red , from rubrica (see… … English new terms dictionary
rubricate — ru·bri·cate … English syllables
rubricate — ru•bri•cate [[t]ˈru brɪˌkeɪt[/t]] v. t. cat•ed, cat•ing 1) to mark or color with red 2) to furnish with or regulate by rubrics • Etymology: 1560–70; < LL rūbrīcātus, ptp. of rūbrīcāre to color red, v. der. of rūbrīc(a) red ocher (see rubric);… … From formal English to slang