Prefix: un- not, opposite of
Root: fenestrated
Suffix: ed- pasted tense of verbs
Etymology:
Comes from the Latin word fenestratus from fenestra meaning to have openings. The earliest use is 1835, fenestrated, meaning to have one or more openings or pores is an adjective first used in 1852. Derived from a similarity with blood capillaries. The definition has not changed
Sentence Definition:
When someone describes an unfenestrated object they are referring to something as having no openings.
Example Sentences:
An unfenestrated oval chamber with six man-sized curved ducts radiating up and out to exit points on the grounds above.
Portions of the east and south façades are unfenestrated and the one on the south has two chimneys and is articulated by brick and terra cotta decoration.
And he had since worn an unfenestrated cannula.
The blades are of the Hodge shape, but hollow and unfenestrated.
Creative Definition: