HomeServicesBlogDictionariesContactSpanish Course
← Back to search

Meaning of limn | Babel Free

Verb CEFR B1
/lɪm/

Definitions

  1. To draw or paint; to delineate.
    also, figuratively, transitive
  2. To illuminate, as a manuscript; to decorate with gold or some other bright colour.
    obsolete, transitive

Equivalents

Examples

“Who then to frail Mortality ſhall truſt, / But limns in Water, or but writes in Duſt.”
“Then the Painter, according to the pattern of ſome living thing, portraieth [draweth out] the picture groſly; afterward he reſembleth it to the life, and with his pencil limneth it with different painting colors.”
“Read books which are in french and Latin, for so you may retain and increase your knowledge in Latin: some times draw and limn and practise perspective.”
“Thou limnest well, / Were I to paint, I should shew you happy.”
“This cupboard, Holy of Holies, held the cloud / Of his soul writ and limned; […]”
“[S]he laughs—in golden tones; she sleeps—like a fragrant lily; she dresses—limning her eyebrows like those of the silkworm moth.”
“As he looked up at the rim of the hole, faintly limned in the moonlight, he mused that this searching feeling of his was perhaps jealousy.”
“In telling these people's stories Mr. [Robert Olen] Butler draws upon the same gifts of empathy and insight, the same ability to limn an entire life in a couple of pages, […]”
“And in her mind's eye, Roland had been exactly such a man as this—tall, dark, foreboding even, with a strong jaw that bespoke a character worth knowing, and intelligence agleam in his eyes. As if to reaffirm her imagination, the sun broke through the trees to limn his broad shoulders with gold.”
“Still, though their terminology changed and their analysis developed, the model is limned fairly clearly as early as 1845–46, in the co-written The German Ideology.”
“Some of her [Elizabeth Barton's] Revelations were no better than ſilly Tales: Such was a certain Tale of Mary Magdalen, delivering her a Letter from Heaven, that was limned with golden Letters: which indeed was written by a Monk of St. Auguſtines, Canterbury: and another at Calais.”

CEFR level

B1
Intermediate
This word is part of the CEFR B1 vocabulary — intermediate level.

See also

Learn this word in context

See limn used in real conversations inside our free language course.

Start Free Course