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LUMINOUS

Volume 17 · 152 words · 1810 Edition

an epithet applied to any thing that shines or emits light.

Luminous Emanations have been observed from human bodies, as also from those of brutes. The light arising from currying a horse, or from rubbing a cat's back, are known to most. Influences of a like kind have been known on combing a woman's head. Bartholin gives us an account, which he entitles mulier splendens, of a lady in Italy whose body would shine whenever slightly touched with a piece of linen. These effluvia of animal bodies have many properties in common with those produced from glass; such as their being lucid, their snapping, and their not being excited without some degree of friction; and are undoubtedly electrical, as a cat's back has been found strongly electrical when stroked. See Electricity and Light.

Luminousness of the Sea. See Light and Sea.

Luminousness of Putrefactive Substances. See Light.

Lump-fish. See Cyclopterus, Ichthyology Index.