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Limned
The Robert E. Howard Lexicon
© 2016 James LaFond
NOV/3/16
limn
(lĭm)
tr.v. limned, limn•ing (lĭm′nĭng), limns
1. To describe or depict by painting or drawing.
2. To suffuse or highlight with light or color; illuminate: "There was just enough juice left in Merrill's flashlight to limn the outlines: A round lobe here. Another lobe over there" (Hampton Sides).
3. To describe or portray in words.
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[Middle English limnen, to illuminate (a manuscript), probably alteration (influenced by limnour, illustrator) of luminen, from Old French luminer, from Latin lūmināre, to illuminate, adorn, from lūmen, lūmin-, light; see leuk- in Indo-European roots.]
Used most often in the Solomon Kane tales, often set at night, such as in this passage from The Moon of Skulls, “He halted a moment at its foot, staring upward where it rose blackly limned against the dying sun.”
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