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Definitions

auroral

[aw-rawr-uhl, aw-rohr-, uh-rawr-, uh-rohr-] / ɔˈrɔr əl, ɔˈroʊr-, əˈrɔr-, əˈroʊr- /




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.

Skies as far south as Cornwall were lit up by the auroral display.

From BBC • Aug. 13, 2024

The event, the biggest in 20 years, produced bright auroral lights in skies across the world.

From BBC • May 22, 2024

"We never had data from the polar regions, so Juno has been transformative in terms of the planet's auroral physics and helping further the discussion about its magnetic field lines," Delamere said.

From Science Daily • May 6, 2024

For isolated brown dwarfs like W1935, the absence of a stellar wind to contribute to the auroral process and explain the extra energy in the upper atmosphere required for the methane emission is a mystery.

From Science Daily • Jan. 9, 2024

Of this pleasant, indistinct promise that auroral cloud seemed somehow the omen or symbol, and watching it he fell asleep again.

From Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, Vol. 26, October, 1880 by Various




Vocabulary lists containing auroral