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librate

[lahy-breyt] / ˈlaɪ breɪt /


Example Sentences

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He proceeded to see if by making the planet librate, or the plane of its orbit tilt up and down, anything could be done.

From Pioneers of Science by Lodge, Oliver, Sir

Whence the objects appear to librate or circulate according to the motions of our heads, which is called dizziness; and we lose the means of balancing ourselves, or preserving our perpendicularity, by vision.

From Zoonomia, Vol. II Or, the Laws of Organic Life by Darwin, Erasmus

Cause of librations.—That the moon should librate is by no means so remarkable a fact as that it should at all times turn very nearly the same face toward the earth.

From A Text-Book of Astronomy by Comstock, George C.

In a general way a cable keeps a ship anchored in the same place, although wind and waves may cause it to "librate" about the anchor.

From A Text-Book of Astronomy by Comstock, George C.

The child then drops upon the ground, and the neighbouring objects seem to continue for some seconds of time to circulate around him, and the earth under him appears to librate like a balance.

From Zoonomia, Vol. I Or, the Laws of Organic Life by Darwin, Erasmus

“We are fully sure that 2020 XL5 will remain librating around L4 for at least 3,500 more years,” Santana-Ros told Space.com.

From Scientific American Feb. 2, 2022

But to borrow a term from astronomy, it is a librating mesothesis: for it may verge more to likeness as in painting, or more to difference, as in sculpture.

From Specimens of the Table Talk of Samuel Taylor Coleridge by Coleridge, Henry Nelson




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