- "raster" has its
origins in the
Latin rastrum (a rake),
which is
derived from
radere (to s****e). It
originates from the
raster scan of cathode-ray tube (CRT)...
-
raster comes from the
Latin word
rastrum (a rake),
which is
derived from
radere (to s****e); see also rastrum, an
instrument for
drawing musical staff lines...
-
Etymology (root origin)
English examples rad-, ras- s****e,
shave Latin rādere, rāsus abrade, ab****n, abrasive, corrade, cor****n, erase, erasure, nonabrasive...
- rasle. It is
named from its
harsh cry, in
Vulgar Latin *rascula, from
Latin rādere ("to s****e"). The
rails are a
family of
small to medium-sized, ground-living...
-
Etymology (root origin)
English examples rad-, ras- s****e,
shave Latin rādere, rāsus abrade, ab****n, abrasive, corrade, cor****n, erase, erasure, nonabrasive...
- Cat.
navalla Sp.
navaja Ast.
navaja Pt.
navalha rasorium CL rad-, stem of
radere 'shave'), + -sorium, a
postclassical suffix denoting an instrument. PR....