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View synonyms for translucid

translucid

[trans-loo-sid, tranz-]

adjective

  1. translucent.



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Word History and Origins

Origin of translucid1

First recorded in 1620–30, translucid is from the Latin word trānslūcidus clear, transparent. See trans-, lucid
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Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

To optimize the look of Spider-Byte, a spider person who fights crime in a cyberspace multiverse and appears translucid, the filmmakers explored current techniques that are right on the cusp of creating three-dimensional holograms in real time.

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Background characters are presented as translucid entities reinforcing the idea that most of us, trapped in routinary hells, are already ghosts.

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Occupations She is a comic book writer whose works include “Translucid,” and an author of “The Amory Wars” book series.

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In his mind he plunges into the watery graveyard of the Atlantic: “He sees himself as bone powder transforming into seaweed and rusty chain links. He sees skulls sheltering translucid fish.”

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Even if there were snickers for the official descriptive — “like an immense leaf undulating at the level of the tree tops, a fluid, light and translucid envelope” — approval outweighed disapproval, at least among its inexpert visitors.

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translucenttranslucidus