sun

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"It's the sun, the sun is amazing today," says Maya.

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Definitions (64)

Toggle American Heritage definitions American Heritage Dictionary (8)

  1. noun A star that is the basis of the solar system and that sustains life on Earth, being the source of heat and light. It has a mean distance from Earth of about 150 million kilometers (93 million miles) a diameter of approximately 1,390,000 kilometers (864,000 miles) and a mass about 330,000 times that of Earth.
  2. noun A star that is the center of a planetary system.
  3. noun The radiant energy, especially heat and visible light, emitted by the sun; sunshine.

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Examples (50)

  • "It's the sun, the sun is amazing today," says Maya. —  RNews - TOP STORIES
  • We have therefore to think of the sun, the centre of the solar system, being an electrified body, and for illustration we will suppose it to be a positively charged body All around the sun is the atomic Aether, which is polarized in the same way that the particles of air were polarized; that is, the two kinds of electricities in the aetherial atom are separated, the negative being on that side nearest to the sun, and the positive on the side further away. —  Aether and Gravitation
  • Vishnu as the sun, or the spirit of whom the sun is the visible embodiment, has become the most important deity in his capacity of the universal giver and preserver of life. —  The Tribes and Castes of the Central Provinces of India—Volume I (of IV)
  • His sun--for the sun is his--rises in a south-west mood, with a bloom on the blue, the grey, or the gold. —  The Colour of Life; and other essays on things seen and heard
  • I get desperate--then out comes the sun, and I say to myself, 'Well, I guess I can go on a while longer, with the sun to help me I hadn't thought of it," said Rosa, "but the sun is a help That indefatigable New York sun! —  Susan Lenox: Her Fall and Rise
 

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Allen's Allen's Synonyms and Antonyms

Used in the same context Used in the Same Context

star ·  sky ·  light ·  sunlight ·  heat ·  rain ·  tree ·  sea ·  earth ·  flower ·  bird ·  wave

Used in the same contextWord Family

sun:   suns ·  sunning

Etymologies (4)

Toggle American Heritage etymologies American Heritage Dictionary (1)

  1. Middle English, from Old English sunne; see sāwel- in Indo-European roots.

Toggle Century etymologies Century Dictionary (3)

  1. Early modern English also sunne, sonne; from Middle English sunne, sonne, sone, from Anglo-Saxon sunne, feminine, = Old Saxon sunna, sunne, sunno = OFries. sunne, sonna = Middle Dutch sonne, Dutch zon = Middle Low German Low German sunne = Old High German sunno, masculine, sunnā, feminine, Middle High German sunne, masculine and feminine, German sonne, feminine, = Icelandic sunna, feminine (only in poetry), = Gothic (Moesogothic) sunno, masculine, sunna, feminine, the sun; with a formative -na (-nōn-), from the same root as Anglo-Saxon sōl = Icelandic sōl = Swedish Danish sōl = Goth, sauil = Latin sōl (later Italian sole = Spanish Portuguese Provencal sol; cf. French soleil, from Latin soliculus, diminutive of sol) = Lithuanian Lett, saule = Sanskrit svar, the sun, with formative -l or -r; both prob. from √ su, √ saw, be light.
  2. = Dutch zonnen = Low German sunnen = German sonnen; from the noun.
  3. Japanese szn, from Chinese ts'un, the Chinese inch, regarded as equal to the middle joint of the finger.
 

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/sən/
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