æthereal

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See also: aethereal

English

Adjective

æthereal (comparative more æthereal, superlative most æthereal)

  1. Archaic form of ethereal.
    • 1769, Firishta, translated by Alexander Dow, Tales translated from the Persian of Inatulla of Delhi, volume I, Dublin: P. and W. Wilson et al., page iii:
      There I beheld the painter of the year diſplaying his variegated fancies on his leafy tablets, and, with the pencil of power dipped in the æthereal bow, writing the leſſons of wiſdom divine on the fair forehead of blooming Nature.
    • 1922, Joseph William Mellor, A Comprehensive Treatise on Inorganic and Theoretical Chemistry, Longmans, Green and Co., Volume I, Chapter V, § 17, page 226:
      For example, V. Meyer and E. Riecke (1888) assumed that the carbon atom is surrounded by an æthereal envelope which, in the case of isolated atoms, has a spherical shape like that supposed to be possessed by the atoms themselves. The atom in the core carries the specific affinities; the æthereal envelope is the seat of the valencies. Each valency is determined by the presence of two opposite electrical poles—called double or di‐poles—situated at the ends of a straight line which is small in comparison with the diameter of the æthereal shell. The four valencies of carbon are represented by four such di‐poles each of which is able to move freely within the æthereal shell, and to turn freely about its middle point.