Combust — Com*bust , a. [L. combustus, p. p. of comburere to burn up; com + burere (only in comp.), of uncertain origin; cf. bustum funeral pyre, prurire to itch, pruna a live coal, Gr. pyrso s firebrand, Skr. plush to burn.] 1. Burnt; consumed. [Obs.]… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Combust — can refer to: Combust (astrological aspect), the obscuring of the unassisted viewing of a planet by the Sun s light Combustion, the exothermical chemical reaction This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title. If an … Wikipedia
combust — late 14c., adj., burnt, from O.Fr. combust (14c.), from L. combustus, pp. of combuere (see COMBUSTION (Cf. combustion)). Also an astrological term for planets when near the sun; the verb is attested from late 15c … Etymology dictionary
combust — ► VERB ▪ consume or be consumed by fire. DERIVATIVES combustible adjective & noun. ORIGIN Latin comburere burn up … English terms dictionary
combust — [kəm bust′] vt., vi. [ME < L combustus, pp. of comburere, to burn up: see COMBUSTION] to undergo or cause to undergo combustion; burn … English World dictionary
combust — [kəm bʌst] verb burn or be burnt by fire. Derivatives combustible adjective &noun combustor noun Origin C15 (earlier (ME) as combustion): from obs. combust burnt , from L. combust , comburere burn up … English new terms dictionary
combust — v.tr. subject to combustion. Etymology: obs. combust (adj.) f. L combustus past part. (as COMBUSTION) … Useful english dictionary
Combust (astrological aspect) — ‹ The template below (Astrology) is being considered for merging. See templates for discussion to help reach a consensus. › Astrology … Wikipedia
combust — verb Etymology: Latin combustus, past participle of comburere to burn up, irregular from com + urere to burn more at ember Date: 15th century burn … New Collegiate Dictionary
combust — /keuhm bust /, v.i., v.t. burn. [1325 75; ME < L combustus (ptp. of comburere to burn up, equiv. to com COM + us var. s. of urere to burn + tus ptp. suffix; b by misanalysis of amburere, another deriv., as am + burere)] * * * … Universalium