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terraqueous
[ ter-ey-kwee-uhs, -ak-wee- ]
adjective
- consisting of land and water, as the earth.
Other Word Forms
- ܲt·qܱ·dzܲ adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of terraqueous1
Example Sentences
An immediate consequence, therefore, which is the subject of Chapter 4, was a radical transformation in the understanding of how the Earth is constructed: the emergence of the concept of the terraqueous globe.
Only later, in 1629, was a satisfactory technical term invented to identify unambiguously this new entity: it was called ‘the terraqueous globe’.
I use ‘Earth’ for the modern, Copernican conception of the Earth as a rotating terraqueous globe, which is one of the planets; ‘earth’ for the pre-Copernican conception of the world we inhabit, being made up of the element earth, which is stationary at the centre of the universe.
One might think that the adoption of the theory of the terraqueous globe automatically meant acknowledging that the seas are lower than the dry land, but the contrary view seemed to be clearly established by scripture and by innumerable respectable authorities.
It is evident from the text of On the Revolutions that the concept of the terraqueous globe was of fundamental importance to him; this was surely the last building block in the construction of the new theory.
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