ray
English

Rays from the sun (1)
Pronunciation
- enPR: rā, IPA(key): /ɹeɪ/
Audio (US) (file) - Rhymes: -eɪ
Etymology 1
Via Middle English, borrowed from Old French rai, from Latin radius (“staff, stake, spoke”). Doublet of radius.
Noun
ray (plural rays)
- A beam of light or radiation.
- I saw a ray of light through the clouds.
- (zoology) A rib-like reinforcement of bone or cartilage in a fish's fin.
- (zoology) One of the spheromeres of a radiate, especially one of the arms of a starfish or an ophiuran.
- (botany) A radiating part of a flower or plant; the marginal florets of a compound flower, such as an aster or a sunflower; one of the pedicels of an umbel or other circular flower cluster; radius.
- (obsolete) Sight; perception; vision; from an old theory of vision, that sight was something which proceeded from the eye to the object seen.
- Alexander Pope
- All eyes direct their rays / On him, and crowds turn coxcombs as they gaze.
- Alexander Pope
- (mathematics) A line extending indefinitely in one direction from a point.
- (colloquial) A tiny amount.
- Unfortunately he didn't have a ray of hope.
Derived terms
Terms derived from ray
Translations
beam of light or radiation
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mathematics: line extending indefinitely in one direction from a point
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Verb
ray (third-person singular simple present rays, present participle raying, simple past and past participle rayed)
- (transitive) To emit something as if in rays.
- Robert Browning
- I had no particular woman in my mind; certainly never intended to personify wisdom, philosophy, or any other abstraction; and the orb, raying colour out of whiteness, was altogether a fancy of my own.
- Robert Browning
- (intransitive) To radiate as if in rays.
Translations
Etymology 2
Old French raie, from Latin raia.
Translations
marine fish with a flat body, large wing-like fins, and a whip-like tail
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Etymology 3
Shortened from array.
Verb
ray (third-person singular simple present rays, present participle raying, simple past and past participle rayed)
- (obsolete) To arrange. [14th-18th c.]
- (now rare) To dress, array (someone). [from 14th c.]
- (Can we find and add a quotation of Sir T. More to this entry?)
- (obsolete) To stain or soil; to defile. [16th-19th c.]
- 1596, Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene, VI.4:
- From his soft eyes the teares he wypt away, / And form his face the filth that did it ray […] .
- 1596, Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene, VI.4:
Etymology 4
From its sound, by analogy with the letters chay, jay, gay, kay, which it resembles graphically.
Related terms
- ar, in Latin and the name of the other Pitman r
Noun
ray (uncountable)
- (obsolete) Array; order; arrangement; dress.
- Spenser
- And spoiling all her gears and goodly ray.
- Spenser
Etymology 6
Alternative forms.
Turkish
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