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English
Etymology
As if from Latin trānslūceō (“shine through; be translucent”), but perhaps a back-formation from translucent (ultimately from the same Latin verb).
Verb
transluce (third-person singular simple present transluces, present participle translucing, simple past and past participle transluced)
- (uncommon) To shine (light) through, and thus make (the thing which is shined through) translucent.
1904, John P. Lonargan, Cwan and Genevieve: A Tale of Love and Romance in the Days of Roderick, Last Monarch of All Ireland, page 35:[…] for her stainless soul transluced the fairest skin, making simplicity a grace, filling her large blue eyes with gentle rays; and her arch laughter with innocent mirth.
1915, The Photographic Journal of America: The Oldest Photography Magazine in America, page 111:By translucing the paper when the negative is otherwise finished the grain can be reduced to a minimum. The following translucing media may be mentioned: (1) Vaseline, (2) paraffin waxin paraffin, (3) castor oil and alcohol, (4) white wax ...
- 1970, Robert S. Hartman, Robert. E. Carter, "Dialogue on Intrinsic Value" (1970), pages 122-23, quoted in 2014, Rem B. Edwards, John W. Davis, Forms of Value and Valuation: Theory and Application, Wipf and Stock Publishers (→ISBN), page 119:
- The less transparent consciousness is, the less translucent will the world itself be. In other words, when consciousness is very opaque, it is not able to transluce the world. Now to transluce the world means to make it understandable.
2014, Kimberly Johnson, Made Flesh: Sacrament and Poetics in Post-Reformation England, University of Pennsylvania Press, →ISBN, page 32:In his refusal to allow tropes to transluce into meaning, Donne locates spiritual significance not in the disembodied and abstract sphere but in the body itself.
- (rare) To be translucent or transparent, to allow light to shine through.
2006, Alexander Levering Kern, Becoming Fire: Spiritual Writing from Rising Generations, Andover Newton Publications, page 5:holy are the doors that admit
holy are the rivets that bind
holy are the windows that transluce
2007, Nicanor G. Tiongson, Salvador F. Bernal: Designing the Stage:At the end of the dance, when “matter turned to spirit,” the two cliffs once again came together to form an arch but both rock structures were now lighted to transluce and transform into stained glass.
2018, Mattis Lundqvist, 25 Low-Carbohydrate Recipes for the Slow Cooker: Delicious low carb recipes for all slow cooker fans - part 1: Measurements in grams, BookRix, →ISBN:Cook the bacon in a pan, add the onion and cook until they start to transluce, then add the garlic and cook for another minute.
Latin
Verb
trānslūcē
- second-person singular present active imperative of trānslūceō
Spanish
Verb
transluce
- inflection of translucir:
- third-person singular present indicative
- second-person singular imperative