Leonid
English
Etymology 1
Leo + -n- + -id. From the constellation of Leo.
Pronunciation
- Lua error in Module:parameters at line 360: Parameter 1 should be a valid language or etymology language code; the value "UK" is not valid. See WT:LOL and WT:LOL/E. IPA(key): /ˈliːənɪd/
Noun
Leonid (plural Leonids)
- Each of a shower of meteorites which fall from the area of sky around the constellation Leo in November.
- 1974, Guy Davenport, Tatlin!:
- I wrote my first story about the ghost of a horse leaping from a cascade of flame just after the leonids had been more torrential than men had remembered them for centuries.
- 1985, Cormac MacCarthy, Blood Meridian, or the Evening Redness in the West:
- Night of your birth. Thirty-three. The Leonids they were called. God how the stars did fall. I looked for blackness, holes in the heavens. The Dipper stove.
- 2001, Anthea Bell, translating WG Sebald, Austerlitz, Penguin 2011, p. 141:
- I was surprised by […] the unusually tall windows, […] through which long telescopes were once turned on eclipses of the sun and the moon, on the intersections of the orbits of the stars with the line of the meridian, on the Leonid meteorite showers and the long-tailed comets flying through space.
Etymology 2
From (deprecated template usage) [etyl] Russian Леони́д (Leoníd) or (deprecated template usage) [etyl] Ukrainian Леонід (Leonid), from (deprecated template usage) [etyl] Ancient Greek Λεωνίδας (Leōnídas). Cognate with the English historical name Leonidas.
Proper noun
Leonid
- A male given name, a transliteration of a common East Slavic name (notably that of the first two Ukrainian presidents, Leonid Kravchuk and Leonid Kuchma, as well as USSR leader Leonid Brezhnev).
Anagrams
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- en:Astronomy