terrene
IPA: tɛrin
noun
- (poetic) The Earth's surface; the earth; the ground.
- Synonym of Terran (“an inhabitant of Earth; an earthling”).
- Dated form of tureen. [A broad, deep serving dish used for serving soup or stew.]
adjective
- Pertaining to earth or the material world; earthly, terrestrial (as opposed to heavenly or marine).
- (science fiction) Made of matter (as opposed to antimatter).
- Synonym of Terran (“of Earth; of terrestrial origin”).
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Examples of "terrene" in Sentences
- The lady paused, as if to consider the weight of that event in the scale of terrene life.
- It was a garden with trees of freshest green and ripe fruits of yellow sheen; and its birds were singing clear and keen and nils ran wimpling through the fair terrene.
- For fire feeds upon nothing but what is moist, for nothing is combustible but what is so; for when the fire is kindled, the air turns to smoke, and the terrene and grosser parts remain in the ashes.
- As, on the contrary, milk, of all other liquids, does not return our images, because it hath too many terrene and gross parts mixed with it; again, oil of all other liquids makes the least noise when moved, for it is perfectly humid.
- It is you, his self-professed terrene representatives, because you find yourself increasingly irrelevant as the human species matures, like a child into adulthood, beyond the need for parental gods and devils and moves into the space where it understands that it is master of its own fate.
- And so farre did this sodaine knowledge in him extend; that he could conceive of divine and celestiall things, and that they were more to be admired and reverenced, then those of humane or terrene consideration; wherefore the more gladly he contented himselfe, to tarry till she awaked of her owne accord.
- Now, as I take it, the most natural and principal nourishment of heat is moisture, as it evidently appears from flames, which increase by the pouring in of oil, and from ashes, which are of the driest things in nature; for after the humidity is consumed by the fire, the terrene and grosser parts remain without any moisture at all.
- This "something more" is related to the manner in which the scene appears somehow in possession of itself: "for the elements have their motions, though the objects they illuminate are fixed, and the ether hath its transparency, the stars their chrystalline, and the lamp its vital flame, though the ruin and its terrene accompaniments have their opaque solidity."
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