Definition of "caudation"
caudation
noun
plural caudations
The property of having a caudate extension or tail.
Quotations
In the meantime, while the daily newspapers of New York are talking over their "Aztec race" the Academy of Sciences at Paris has its grave announcement in a communication from M. de Castelnan, a duplicate of which we find in the Bulletic of the 'Socièté de Geographie respecting the NIAM-NIAMS, a people of Central Africa, to the southwest of the Lake Tchad, a people of whom there have been some scattered rumors before, suggesting to a modern Monboddo a " theory of caudation," in fact a people wearing indisputable natural tails.
1852, The Literary World - Volume 10, page 69
There is a slight approach in several examples (of both sexes) to caudation of the hind-wing on first median nervule and submedian nervure, and in specimens from Delagoa Bay (two males, three females) this tendency is more pronounced.
1887, Roland Trimen, James Henry Bowker, South-African Butterflies: A Monograph of the Extra-tropical Species
Crawley, who what with the habit of cerebral hallucination due to brandy and the present flutter of his spirits and his conscience, had for a moment or two lost all landmarks of probability, no sooner felt his hand encounter a tail — slight in size, but stiff as a pug's, and straight as a pointer's —than he uttered a dismal howl, and it is said that for a single moment he really suspected premature caudation had been inflicted on him for his crimes.
1895, Charles Reade, It is Never Too Late to Mend - Volume 2, page 234
Quotations
The fox, as in the old fable, has lost his tail, and must needs go about now most disinterestedly preaching that everybody else, who find their tails very useful, must submit to de-caudation, and because he has got the gout, must not use the bounties of God in moderation.
1861, John Barclay (of Leicester, Eng.), Ale, wine, spirits, and tobacco, page 59
Quotations
In acute cases they are rapidly produced, make scarcely an attempt at development, and die off with rapidity; in schirrus they are formed more slowly, and in much smaller numbers, live longer, and make some attempt at caudation, but they are still farther removed in form from the typical cell of healthy tissues.
1861, William Braithwaite, The Retrospect of Medicine
Not only is the croupous pseudo-membrane which projects above the surface of the mucosa in greater part a fibrinous exudation, but the caudation also participates very essentially in the formation of the diphtheritic material deposited in the mucosa.
1889, Julius Cohnheim, Lectures on General Pathology: The pathology of nutrition, page 591
(writing) A section appended to the end of a word, line, or poem.
Quotations
To make it a bit easier to follow, each added letter is underlined, and insertions/hydrations/ caudations are parenthesized.
1978, Word Ways: The Journal of Recreational Linguistics - Volumes 11-12
As with the voice, this physicality is natural and flexible, a background of four-beat lines, grouped into four five-line stanzas (a central section flanked by anacrusis and caudation) with occasional moves to five- or six- beat lines, and occasional catalexis ("unrealized"/"silent" beats), always at stanzaic ends.
1996, Language and Literature - Volume 21, page 102
(writing) The addition of a caudation.
Quotations
There is no adequate reporting system in use that can afford to treat words otherwise than as Hamlet's mother treated her heart, "cleave them in twain and fling away the basser half;" but in script the "baser half" in variably the final portion, and we get in the sentences of the curt style a jumble of inchoate nouns, paraplegic verbs and amputated adjectives, truncated of their tails and dependent each for its re-caudation on the accurate re-cordation (ahem !) of an equally deficient context.
1893, The National Stenographer - Volume 4, page 210