admirant, a. rare.
(ædˈmaɪərənt)
[f. admire v. + -ant1, or ad. L. admīrans, admīrant- pres. pple. of admirari.]
= admiring ppl. a.
| 1866 J. B. Rose tr. Ovid's Metamorphoses vi. 159 The envy then Of crowds admirant—now of pity's gaze: Amidst the corpses of her sons she strays. 1893 F. Adams New Egypt iv. 166 No Anglo-Egyptian seemed to believe that the composer of so ingenuously an admirant illustration of their idol could have the faintest taint of ‘disloyalty’ about him. |