2 July 2016
natant
[neyt-nt]
adjective
1. swimming; floating.
2. Botany. floating on water, as the leaf of an aquatic plant.
Origin of natant
Latin
1700-1710; < Latin natant- (stem of natāns), present participle of natāre to swim; see -ant
Related forms
natantly, adverb
Dictionary.com
Examples from the Web for natant
Historical Examples
She stood rigid, listening with a natant, sickening consciousness that something terrible hung at her back.
The Red Debt
Everett MacDonald
Anagram
ant tan
Today’s quote
Once writing has become your major vice and greatest pleasure, only death can stop it.
– Ernest Hemingway
On this day
2 July 1839 – Twenty miles off the coast of Cuba, 53 rebelling African slaves led by Joseph Cinqué take over the slave ship, Amistad. The 49 adults and four children had been captured in Sierra Leone and sold into slavery in Cuba. After commandeering the ship, the men demanded the ship’s navigator (Don Montez) to return them home. Montez deceived them and sailed up the USA east coast to Long Island. The USA took custody of the ship and a court-case ensued over the legal status of the slaves. In 1841, in the case of the United States v The Amistad, the US Supreme Court ruled that the slaves had been illegally transported and held as slaves. The Court ordered them to be freed. 35 of them returned to Africa in 1842.
2 July 1900 – the first Zeppelin flight takes place in Germany.
2 July 1937 – Amelia Earhart and Fred Noonan are last heard from over the Pacific while attempting an equatorial round-the-world flight.
2 July 1961 – death of Ernest Hemingway, American author. He wrote books including ‘For Whom the Bell Tolls‘ and ‘Old Man and the Sea‘. Born 21 July 1899.
2 July 1976 – The Republic of Vietnam (South Vietnam) falls to the Communist North Vietnam, resulting in the formation of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam.