Noun
aureole (plural aureoles)
- A circle of light or halo around the head of a deity or a saint.
1916, Edwin Arlington Robinson, “The Voice of Age”, in The Man Against the Sky:She feels, with all our furniture,
Room yet for something more secure
Than our self-kindled aureoles
To guide our poor forgotten souls […]
2004, Andrea Levy, chapter 4, in Small Island, London: Review, page 69:Those white women whose superiority encircled them like an aureole, could quieten any raucous gathering by just placing a finger to a lip.
- (by extension) Any luminous or colored ring that encircles something.
1972, Ursula K. Le Guin, chapter 6, in The Farthest Shore, Atheneum Books:The dust of the road and his long, wiry hair made aureoles of red about him in the westering light […]
- (astronomy) A corona.
- (geology) A ring around an igneous intrusion.
- 1990, Roger Mason, Petrology of the Metamorphic Rocks, Chapter 3: "Metamorphism associated with igneous intrusions":
- Cleavage and folds are imprinted are overprinted by the contact metamorphic aureole, indicating that they belong to a pre-intrustive episode of rock deformation and accompanying regional deformation.
- (theology) Alternative form of aureola (“increment to blessedness”)
Translations
circle of light or halo around the head of a deity
References
- “aureole”, in Dictionary.com Unabridged, Dictionary.com, LLC, 1995–present.
- "aureole" in the Wordsmyth Dictionary-Thesaurus (Wordsmyth, 2002)
- "aureole" in Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary (Cambridge University Press, 2007)
- “aureole”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.
- Oxford English Dictionary, second edition (1989)
- Random House Webster's Unabridged Electronic Dictionary (1987-1996)