moonbathe
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From moon + bathe, modelled on sunbathe.
Verb
[edit]moonbathe (third-person singular simple present moonbathes, present participle moonbathing, simple past and past participle moonbathed)
- (intransitive) To expose one's body to moonlight in order to relax, or in the belief that it has restorative effects. (Compare sunbathe.)
- 1995 May 23, Weekly World News, volume 16, number 34, page 11:
- "Moonbathing gives my body a nice even bronze coloring," says Cyndi Grenwal, a 17-year-old high school senior. "And I don't have to worry about ultraviolet rays giving me sunburn or skin cancer.
- 2004, Marco Fazzini, Resisting Alterities: Wilson Harris and Other Avatars of Otherness, Rodopi, →ISBN, page 75:
- Shall I moonbathe tonight?
Or sit in the summerhouse
With Côtes de Beaune and spiders?
Shall I read by flickering light
From a bug […]
- 2013, Lesley Tierra, Healing with the Herbs of Life: Hundreds of Herbal Remedies, Therapies, and Preparations, Crossing Press, →ISBN, page 258:
- Next, moonbathe, especially under the full moon, as this helps regulate and bring on the cycle, […]
- 2016, Ruth Marshall, Limerick Folk Tales, The History Press, →ISBN:
- As the full moon approached, people would bring their sick to the lake shore to moonbathe, so that the moonlight would shine brightly on them near the water.
- 2017, Dannika Dark, Ravenheart (Crossbreed Series: Book 2):
- “Next time you decide to moonbathe on the rooftop at midnight, do me a favor and put your jacket on.” I swung open the door. “Only if you put on your hat.” kicked off my shoes, removed my weapons, flung my bra [off...]