rigor mortis - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Learned borrowing from New Latin rigor mortis (literally “stiffness of death”). First attested in 1842.
rigor mortis (usually uncountable, plural rigor mortises)
- Temporary stiffness of a body's muscles and joints following death.
- Synonyms: (informal) rigor, death-stiffness
1840, Royal Society of London, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London[1], page 491:
Such are the principal phenomena observed during that form of contraction which I conceive to be analogous to the rigor mortis...
1913, Arthur Conan Doyle, “(please specify the page)”, in The Poison Belt […], London; New York, N.Y.: Hodder and Stoughton, →OCLC:
Then we carried in poor Austin from the yard. His muscles were set as hard as a board in the most exaggerated rigor mortis, while the contraction of the fibres had drawn his mouth into a hard sardonic grin.
1991, Bruce Bennett, Spirit in Exile: Peter Porter and His Poetry, Oxford University Press, page 56:
[…] an unpublished writer who, for all his ambition and flashes of talent, had not been trained in the rigours (nor rigor mortises, for that matter) of a university education.
2009, A.S.Q., The Anatomy of Grief, AuthorHouse, page 109:
Its wood can neither be carved nor used for the making of the furniture because of the volatility of those characteristics of the nutrients it has sucked which come from innumerable varieties of rigor mortises.
2010, Dean Young, The Art of Recklessness: Poetry as Assertive Force and Contradiction, Graywolf Press, pages 66–67:
Instead, Tender Buttons destabilizes persistent syntactic arrangements and lexical rigor mortises to assert that “certainly glittering is handsome and convincing,” glittering a radiant process of flux and variance.
Although the orthography of British English prescribes rigour vs. the orthography of American English rigor, "rigour mortis" does not exist. That is a misspelling.
Temporary stiffness of a body's muscles and joints following death
rigor mortis (third-person singular simple present rigor mortises, present participle rigor mortising, simple past and past participle rigor mortised)
- To stiffen the muscles and joints with, or as if with, rigor mortis.
1964, Israel Segal, Out of the Womb, Times Press, page 177:
As Olive was in the kitchen making some tea I asked what kind of louse the host was. “The kind you like to see laying out on a mortuary slab rigor mortising before the introduction.”
1972, James R. McCready, The Seasons Calling: Haiku & Western-Style Verse, Charles E. Tuttle Company, Inc., →ISBN:
Hands / Responding to bold brain waves, / Hiding feelings, / Twiddling facts, / Dating destinies, / Doting on things, / Withering in death traps, / Snapping brittle, / Folding stiffly / When movement ceases / And rigor mortises the joints.
2009, From the Fishouse: An Anthology of Poems that Sing, Rhyme, Resound, Syncopate, Alliterate, and Just Plain Sound Great, Persea Books, page 189:
Forget rigor mortising, clutter of taxidermy.
2017, Albert Bennetti, In a Buffalo Robe, Archway Publishing, Simon & Schuster, →ISBN:
At McCray’s, we had to lift Pa off Flash in the folded position he had rigor mortised to.
Learned borrowing from New Latin rigor mortis (literally “stiffness of death”).
rigor mortis f (uncountable)
Compound of rigor (“stiffness”) + mortis (“of death”).
- (Classical Latin) IPA(key): /ˈri.ɡor ˈmor.tis/, [ˈrɪɡɔr ˈmɔrt̪ɪs̠]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): /ˈri.ɡor ˈmor.tis/, [ˈriːɡor ˈmɔrt̪is]
rigor mortis m
Third-declension noun with an indeclinable portion, singular only.
Learned borrowing from New Latin rigor mortis (literally “stiffness of death”).
rigor mortis m (uncountable)
Learned borrowing from New Latin rigor mortis (literally “stiffness of death”).
rigor mortis m (uncountable)
- “rigor mortis”, in Diccionario de la lengua española [Dictionary of the Spanish Language] (in Spanish), online version 23.8, Royal Spanish Academy [Spanish: Real Academia Española], 2024 December 10