English

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Etymology

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From Latin tenebrae (darkness) +‎ -ize.

Verb

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tenebrize (third-person singular simple present tenebrizes, present participle tenebrizing, simple past and past participle tenebrized)

  1. (archaic, rare) To dwell in darkness.
    • 1648, Paul Knell, Israel and England paralelled, etc, page 17:
      you of the Laity, for tenebrizing, for your Conventicles;
    • 1662, Robert Loveday, Loveday's letters, domestick and forreign, page 68:
      That I had not a line or two from your hand by Mr. D. I suppose was rather mischance then intention: that I eagerly expected it may be credited from my frequent importunities, from which I know not how you will defend your self, so long as I tenebrize it here in this blind corner, where I almost live like a flye in winter, and onely play in the Sun-shine when I communicate with such freinds as your self.
    • 2011, Rose Macaulay, Personal Pleasures:
      We spend too many of these precious clinic hours in blind stupor, tenebrizing it like polar bears in winter.
  2. (rare) To make dark and shadowy.
    • 2006, Dani Cavallaro, “Oshii’s Technopolitics”, in The cinema of Mamoru Oshii: Fantasy, Technology, and Politics, Jefferson, N.C., London: McFarland & Company, →ISBN, page 139:
      The overall atmosphere is not merely murky but tenebrized and quite literally night-soaked.