Limn
verb ·Moderate ·College level
Definitions
- 1 To draw or paint; to delineate. also, figuratively, transitive
"Who then to frail Mortality ſhall truſt, / But limns in Water, or but writes in Duſt."
- 2 make a portrait of wordnet
- 3 To illuminate, as a manuscript; to decorate with gold or some other bright colour. obsolete, transitive
"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."
- 4 trace the shape of wordnet
Example
More examples"Who then to frail Mortality ſhall truſt, / But limns in Water, or but writes in Duſt."
Etymology
From Middle English limnen, limyne, lymm, lymn, lymne (“to illuminate (a manuscript)”), a variant of luminen (“to illuminate (a manuscript)”), short form of enluminen (“to shed light on, illuminate; to enlighten; to make bright or clear; to give colour to; to illuminate (a manuscript); to depict, describe; to adorn or embellish with figures of speech or poetry; to make famous, glorious, or illustrious”), from Old French enluminer (“to brighten, light up; to give colour to; to illuminate (a manuscript)”), from Latin illūminō (“to brighten, light up; to adorn; to make conspicuous”), from il- (a variant of in- (prefix meaning ‘in, inside’)) + lūminō (“to brighten, illuminate; to reveal”) (from lūmen (“light; (poetic) brightness”) (from Proto-Indo-European *lewk- (“bright; to shine; to see”)) + -ō (suffix forming regular first-conjugation verbs)).
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Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.