Ruminations.
Where does the word "twilight" come from?
"Twilight" as a noun meaning "light from the sky when the sun is slightly below the horizon" comes from Old Englishtwi, "two or twice," and leht (Anglian) or leoht (West Saxon), both meaning "daylight." The OED lists 11 different uses for the word - 10 as nouns and 1 as a verb. The noun form can also mean "partial illumination," and "an intermediate condition." Strangely, the Oxford English Dictionary describes the additional meanings of "obscure" and "figurative of early times" as nouns instead of adjectives; perhaps the sense meant is "something obscure" or "that which is figurative of early times." The verb means "to light dimly or imperfectly." The earliest written use of the noun is around 1415, in a translation by John Lydgate, prior and poet; of the verb, in 1819, in the writings of John Keats, poet. Links.
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