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Mar 17, 2026
This week’s theme
Words used figuratively

This week’s words
scaturient
relucent

relucent
Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer I, 1907
Art: Gustav Klimt

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relucent

PRONUNCIATION:
(ri-LOO-suhnt)

MEANING:
adjective
1. Shining or reflecting light.
2. Radiant; luminous.

ETYMOLOGY:
From Latin re- (back) + lucere (to shine). Earliest documented use: 1487.

NOTES:
Relucent is a synonym of lucent. So why add the prefix re- and make the word longer when it means the same? Sometimes prefixes are added for emphasis, but over time the word loses its extra shine and settles back into the unprefixed meaning. Other examples are fulgent and refulgent, iterate and reiterate, splendent and resplendent.

USAGE:
“The myriad-headed monster fights and bleeds for this one thing, this red-burning, relucent gold.”
Stefan Zweig; Émile Verhaeren; Constable & Co.; 1914.

“And for the relucent queen of the Tonys, [Audra] McDonald, she’s most focused on the present state of theater and how the Tony Awards reflect that.”
Alan H. Scott; Broadway’s Returns Are up and the Tonys Are Proof; It’s as Diverse as Ever; Newsweek (New York); Jun 13, 2025.

A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
We open our mouths and out flow words whose ancestries we do not even know. We are walking lexicons. In a single sentence of idle chatter we preserve Latin, Anglo-Saxon, Norse: we carry a museum inside our heads, each day we commemorate peoples of whom we have never heard. -Penelope Lively, writer (b. 17 Mar 1933)

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