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Webster 1913 Edition


Noctivagant

Noc-tiv′a-gant

,
Adj.
[L.
nox
,
noctis
, night +
vagans
, p. pr. of
vagari
to wander about.]
(Zool.)
Going about in the night; night-wandering.

Webster 1828 Edition


Noctivagant

NOCTIV'AGANT

,
Adj.
[L. night, and to wander.] Wandering in the night.

Definition 2024


noctivagant

noctivagant

English

Adjective

noctivagant (comparative more noctivagant, superlative most noctivagant)

  1. Walking or wandering in the nighttime, nightwandering. [from 17th c.]
    • 1823, James Hogg, The Three Perils of Woman; Or, Love, Leasing and Jealousy: A Series of Domestic Scottish Tales, E. Duyckinck (1823), p. 145:
      "'[] I therefore think, Sarah, that the incommensurability of the crime with the effect, completely warrants the supersaliency of this noctivagant delinquent.'"
    • 1967, Walter Hamilton, Parodies of the Works of English & American Authors, Johnson Reprint Corporation (1967), p. 195:
      "Over the city, the suburb, the slum / He rambled from pillar to post, / And backward and forward, observant, though dumb, / As a fleetly noctivagant ghost."
    • 1982, TC Boyle, Water Music, Penguin 2006, p. 363:
      Unhappily, we lost the big fellow, Smirke, to noctivagant predators some days back [...].
    • 2003, Alan Wall, The School of Night, St. Martin's Press (2003), p. 223–224:
      "Not merely nocturnal but noctivagant, a nightwalker, a prowler, a nomad of the midnight streets, attempting to abolish the distinction between the light that comes from outside and the sort that shines within."

Quotations

  • For usage examples of this term, see Citations:noctivagant.

Translations

References

  • "noctivagant" in A Complete Dictionary of the English Language, Both with Regard to Sound and Meaning, Thomas Sheridan, 1790.