suffuse
English
WOTD – 18 October 2007
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation, US) IPA(key): /səˈfjuːz/
Audio (US) (file) - Rhymes: -uːz
Verb
suffuse (third-person singular simple present suffuses, present participle suffusing, simple past and past participle suffused)
- (transitive) To spread through or over something, especially as a liquid, colour or light; to bathe.
- The entire room was suffused with a golden light.
- (transitive, figuratively) To spread through or over in the manner of a liquid.
- The warmth suffused his cold fingers.
- 1983, Robert Ferro, The Family of Max Desir, page 87:
- Marie's face was suffused with a sleepy, appreciative look.
- 2019 March 28, David Sims, “A Portrait of the Artist as a Perpetually Stoned Beach Bum”, in The Atlantic:
- His newest work, The Beach Bum, shares a gauzy neon aesthetic and Florida setting with Spring Breakers, and it’s marked by the usual plethora of drug use, free love, and pirate’s-life-for-me lawlessness that suffuses every Korine movie.
- (transitive) To pour underneath.
Usage notes
- The verb is often used in the passive voice.
Synonyms
Related terms
Translations
to spread through or over something, especially as a liquid, colour or light
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to spread through or over in the manner of a liquid
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Adjective
suffuse (comparative more suffuse, superlative most suffuse)
- Suffused; diffuse.
- 1912, New York State Museum, Annual Report, page 243:
- This limonite-colored mud is most often very suffuse and only faintly apparent.
- 2014, Rita Petrini, Through the Curtain of Time and Space, →ISBN:
- Most of us mortals choose a very suffuse, dim light to have in our room, others push the switch to the maximum.
Italian
Latin
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