aurorean
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Either the Latin aurōre(us) + the English -an or formed from the two English elements auror(a) + -ean.
Pronunciation
[edit]Adjective
[edit]aurorean (comparative more aurorean, superlative most aurorean)
- Belonging to the dawn, or resembling it in brilliant hue.
- 1783, Richard Griffith (misattributed to Laurence Sterne), The Koran: or, The Life, Character, and Sentiments, of Tria Juncta in Uno in The Posthumous Works of Laurence Sterne, London, Volume 6, p. 50,[1]
- […] a winged seraph […] sipping aurorean dew, and extracting nectareous essences from aromatic flowers.
- 1819, John Keats, “Ode to Psyche”, in Lamia, Isabella, The Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems[2], London: Taylor and Hessey, published 1820, page 118:
- Their lips touch’d not, but had not bade adieu,
As if disjoined by soft-handed slumber,
And ready still past kisses to outnumber
At tender eye-dawn of aurorean love:
- 1860, Robert Bulwer-Lytton (as Owen Meredith), “Lucile”, London: Chapman and Hall, Part 2, Canto 5, stanza 16, p. 300,[3]
- […] There, hover’d in light,
- That image aloft, o’er the shapeless and bright
- And Aurorean clouds, […]
- 1880, Algernon Charles Swinburne, “Birthday Ode”, in Songs of the Springtides,[4], London: Chatto and Windus, page 119:
- When the earliest dews impearled
The front of all the world
Ringed with aurorean aureole of the sun,
- 1896, George Santayana, Sonnet 50 in Sonnets and Other Verses, New York: Stone and Kimball, p. 54,[5]
- Though no dawn burst, and no aurorean choir
- Sing GLORIA DEO when the heavens ope,
- 1783, Richard Griffith (misattributed to Laurence Sterne), The Koran: or, The Life, Character, and Sentiments, of Tria Juncta in Uno in The Posthumous Works of Laurence Sterne, London, Volume 6, p. 50,[1]
- (mythology) Of or relating to Aurora, goddess of dawn in Roman mythology.
- (astronomy) Of or relating to the asteroid (94) Aurora.
Translations
[edit]belonging to or resembling the dawn
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References
[edit]- NED I (A–B; 1st ed., 1888), § 1 (A), page 567/3, “Aurorean, a.”