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liminal
[ lim-uh-nl ]
adjective
- Psychology. of, relating to, or situated at the limen, the threshold at which a stimulus begins to produce an effect:
The subjects' responses to liminal stimulation differed, with some responding and some not.
- of or relating to a transitional or intermediate state, stage, or period: liminal space def.
Confusion can strike in the liminal states between waking and sleeping.
The liminal period between adolescence and adulthood is a challenging place to be.
Edwardian servants were liminal figures, existing in both upper- and lower-class society.
liminal
/ ˈlɪmɪnəl /
adjective
- psychol relating to the point (or threshold) beyond which a sensation becomes too faint to be experienced
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of liminal1
Example Sentences
For an even bigger scare, Google "are liminal spaces real," and you'll come across articles from sites like How Stuff Works which details that, yes, they are.
There’s nothing gory or truly scary here; you’re more likely to cry than scream watching these big-hearted mortals and spirits maneuver their bizarre liminal world.
And yet people continue to move to Los Angeles, a place synonymous with liminal space — the space between who we are and who we want to become.
The Assembly member finds herself in a bit of a liminal space now, with more than six months to go until the election.
A complement of familiar quantum mechanical terms are dropped along the way, with only the hint of a thud: superposition, entanglement, liminal, multiverse — ideas that have become standard sci-plot devices and useful literary metaphors.
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More About Liminal
What does liminal mean?
Liminal is an adjective that’s used to describe things that exist at the threshold (or border) between one thing and another.
In psychology and physiology, the word more specifically means relating to the point (or threshold) beyond which a sensation becomes too faint to be experienced. In this way, liminal is an adjective form of the noun limen, which refers to this threshold.
Example: After graduation, many students find themselves in a liminal state before they’re fully established in the workplace.
Where does liminal come from?
The first records of the word liminal come from the late 1800s. It comes from the Latin līmen, meaning “threshold.” In its literal sense, a threshold is a doorway. Liminal is often used to describe the threshold, or gateway, between two stages.
When used in a general way, liminal is often used to describe in-between spaces, places, and feelings. Physical spaces described as liminal in this way often serve as transitional zones between one place and another—an airport might be described as liminal.
The noun form liminality is especially used in anthropology to refer to a state of transition between one stage and the next, especially between major stages in one’s life or during a rite of passage (such as puberty or marriage). Anthropologists often separate these events into preliminal, liminal, and postliminal stages. The liminal stage is the middle stage, the in-between period during which a person has not yet fully reached their new status in whatever rite of passage they are going through. (For example, being “the new kid” for a while when attending a new school, before being fully incorporated into a new group of friends.) Liminal stages like this are often marked by uncertainty.
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What are some other forms related to liminal?
- liminality (noun)
What are some synonyms for liminal?
What are some words that share a root or word element with liminal?
What are some words that often get used in discussing liminal?
How is liminal used in real life?
Liminal is most often used to describe transitional spaces and events.
"From fear to hope, and everything in-between: the uncertainty of liminal places, the new paces, the impetus and the impulse of moving ahead."
Read Enri Canaj's reflections on photographing the European migrant crisis: https://t.co/xjjMtxwr73
© Enri Canaj / Magnum Photos pic.twitter.com/Y0f9pSMlYA
— Magnum Photos (@MagnumPhotos) June 20, 2020
I know people overuse the word but 200 metres out from the shore on the harbour mud, really does begin to feel liminal pic.twitter.com/SbQpYO4kWG
— Books Landscape Magic (@BooksnMagic) June 20, 2020
Olifantsbos, where I scattered my dad's ashes. It seemed a perfect place for him; a liminal space, not walled-in by anything. Hamba kahle! pic.twitter.com/0Y2VGuxr6h
— Dawn Nell (@dawnnell) June 21, 2020
Try using liminal!
Which of the following things could be described as liminal?
A. A political revolutionary period.
B. The period between a president’s election and inauguration.
C. A probationary period at a new job.
D. All of the above.
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