Putative
Pronunciation
- US IPA: /ˈpju.tə.tɪv/
Origin
First attested 1432, from Middle French putatif, from Latin putÄtÄ«vus ("supposed, purported"), from putÄtus ("thought"), from putÅ ("").
Full definition of putative
Adjective
putative
- Commonly believed or deemed to be the case; accepted by supposition rather than as a result of proof.
- 1879, Maurice Mauris, "A Materialistic Artist," New York Times, 9 Nov., p. 10:The lady . . . insisted upon going herself, requesting me to mind for a second the baby. . . . lo! the baby awoke and stared at me with a pair of big frightened eyes, which the little thing in another moment rolled in all directions, as if in search of its putative mother.
- 1989, William Colby and , "US must support Thailand if Cambodia is to survive," Milwaukee Sentinel (Los Angeles Times Service), 28 Oct. (retrieved 15 Sep. 2009):Just as Prince Sihanouk is fronting for the Khmer Rouge today . . . so also was he their putative leader from 1970 to 1975.
- 2006, Unmesh Kher, "No Neat Endings for the JonBenet Case," Time, 18 Aug.:Karr's past does raise suspicions. When he was arrested in Bangkok, he was living in a dormitory-like guesthouse in a neighborhood frequented by sex tourists. . . . Of course, Karr's putative pedophilia would not make him guilty of murder.