Aurora
Aurora ({not transcribed}) , noun
[Latin aurora, for ausosa, akin to Greek {not transcribed}, {not transcribed}, dawn, Sanskrit ushas, and English east.]
1.
The rising light of the morning; the dawn of day; the redness of the sky just before the sun rises.
2.
The rise, dawn, or beginning. — Hawthorne
3.
(Class. Mythology) The Roman personification of the dawn of day; the goddess of the morning. The poets represented her a rising out of the ocean, in a chariot, with rosy fingers dropping gentle dew.
4.
(Botany) A species of crowfoot. — Johnson
5.
The aurora borealis or aurora australis (northern or southern lights).
Collocations (2)
Aurora borealis , A luminous meteoric phenomenon, visible only at night, and supposed to be of electrical origin. This species of light usually appears in streams, ascending toward the zenith from a dusky line or bank, a few degrees above the northern horizon; when reaching south beyond the zenith, it forms what is called the corona, about a spot in the heavens toward which the dipping needle points. Occasionally the aurora appears as an arch of light across the heavens from east to west. Sometimes it assumes a wavy appearance, and the streams of light are then called merry dancers. They assume a variety of colors, from a pale red or yellow to a deep red or blood color.
Aurora australis , is a corresponding phenomenon in the southern hemisphere, the streams of light ascending in the same manner from near the southern horizon.