aurorean

Etymology
Either the + the 🇨🇬 or formed from the two 🇨🇬 elements.

Adjective

 * 1) Belonging to the dawn, or resembling it in brilliant hue.
 * 2) * 1783, Richard Griffith (misattributed to ), The Koran: or, The Life, Character, and Sentiments, of Tria Juncta in Uno in The Posthumous Works of Laurence Sterne, London, Volume6, p.50,
 * a winged seraph sipping aurorean dew, and extracting nectareous essences from aromatic flowers.
 * 1) * 1860, (as Owen Meredith), “”, London: Chapman and Hall, Part2, Canto5, stanza16, p.300,
 * There, hover’d in light,
 * That image aloft, o’er the shapeless and bright
 * And Aurorean clouds,
 * 1) * 1896,, Sonnet50 in Sonnets and Other Verses, New York: Stone and Kimball, p.54,
 * Though no dawn burst, and no aurorean choir
 * Sing GLORIA DEO when the heavens ope,
 * 1) * 1896,, Sonnet50 in Sonnets and Other Verses, New York: Stone and Kimball, p.54,
 * Though no dawn burst, and no aurorean choir
 * Sing GLORIA DEO when the heavens ope,

Translations

 * Welsh: awroraidd