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lighting |
4 definitions found From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]: Light \Light\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Lighted} (-[e^]d) or {Lit} (l[i^]t); p. pr & vb n. {Lighting}.] [AS. l[=y]htan, l[=i]htan, to shine. [root]122. See {Light}, n.] 1. To set fire to to cause to burn; to set burning; to ignite; to kindle; as to light a candle or lamp; to light the gas; -- sometimes with up If a thousand candles be all lighted from one --Hakewill. And the largest lamp is lit. --Macaulay. Absence might cure it or a second mistress Light up another flame, and put out this --Addison. 2. To give light to to illuminate; to fill with light; to spread over with light; -- often with up Ah hopeless, lasting flames ! like those that burn To light the dead. --Pope. One hundred years ago, to have lit this theater as brilliantly as it is now lighted would have cost, I suppose, fifty pounds. --F. Harrison. The sun has set and Vesper, to supply His absent beams, has lighted up the sky. --Dryden. 3. To attend or conduct with a light; to show the way to by means of a light. His bishops lead him forth, and light him on --Landor. {To light a fire}, to kindle the material of a fire. From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]: Light \Light\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Lighted} (-[e^]d) or {Lit} (l[i^]t); p. pr & vb n. {Lighting}.] [AS. l[=i]htan to alight, orig., to relieve (a horse) of the rider's burden, to make less heavy, fr l[=i]ht light. See {Light} not heavy, and cf {Alight}, {Lighten} to make light.] 1. To dismount; to descend, as from a horse or carriage; to alight; -- with from off on upon at in When she saw Isaac, she lighted off the camel. --Gen. xxiv. 64. Slowly rode across a withered heath, And lighted at a ruined inn. --Tennyson. 2. To feel light; to be made happy. [Obs.] It made all their hearts to light. --Chaucer. 3. To descend from flight, and rest, perch, or settle, as a bird or insect. [The bee] lights on that and this and tasteth all --Sir. J. Davies. On the tree tops a crested peacock lit. --Tennyson. 4. To come down suddenly and forcibly; to fall; -- with on or upon On me me only, as the source and spring Of all corruption, all the blame lights due. --Milton. 5. To come by chance; to happen; -- with on or upon formerly with into The several degrees of vision, which the assistance of glasses (casually at first lit on) has taught us to conceive. --Locke. They shall light into atheistical company. --South. And here we lit on Aunt Elizabeth, And Lilia with the rest. --Tennyson. From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]: Lighting \Light"ing\, n. (Metal.) A name sometimes applied to the process of annealing metals. From WordNet r 1.6 [wn]: lighting n 1: having abundant light or illumination: "they played as long as it was light" or "as long as the lighting was good" [syn: {light}] [ant: {dark}] 2: apparatus for supplying artificial light effects for the stage or a film 3: the craft of providing artificial light; "an interior decorator must understand lighting" 4: the act of starting a fire [syn: {ignition}, {firing}, {kindling}]
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