supplicat
Etymology
Latin, he supplicates.
supplicat means A petition, especially onewritten, with a certificate that the conditions have been complied with. Lexicurio rates it Sui generis — a strength score of 87 out of 100.
Why “supplicat” is a great word
SUPPLICAT — [Noun] A formal written petition, especially one submitted with a certificate confirming that specific conditions have been met. From Latin supplicat, third person singular present indicative of supplicare ("to beseech, kneel down, pray humbly"), from sub- ("under") and plicare ("to fold"). Unlike a "petition" (a general, formal request) or an "entreaty" (an earnest but unadorned plea), a supplicat is a plea armored in bureaucracy, its raw humility notarized and bound. It is the completed checklist appended to a dream of admission, the stamped affidavit filed for a pardon, the clinical documentation submitted for bereavement leave—the soul's cry, meticulously folded under the weight of its own prerequisites.
noun
- A petition, especially onewritten, with a certificate that the conditions have been complied with.