corusco

Etymology 1
Related to. Of origin according to the TLL; perhaps related to Ancient Greek  and. Compare Ancient Greek, ,.

Verb

 * 1)  to shake, brandish, wave, move about
 * 2) * 4th C. , Avienus, Aratea 636–638:
 * "la"
 * 1) * 4th C. , Avienus, Aratea 636–638:
 * "la"

- Namque et sīdereīs cycnus secat aethera pinnīs, dōnātus caelō, nōn clārō lūcidus astrō, sed tamen ōs flagrāns et guttura longa coruscāns.


 * 1) * 354 – 450 , Saint Augustine, Enarratio in Psalmos 121.9:
 * "la"

- Portāvērunt Deum, et dē ipsīs Deus coruscābat mīrācula, tonābat terrōrēs, pluēbat cōnsōlātiōnēs.


 * 1)  to shake, vibrate, flit
 * 2) * 3rd C. , Tertullian, De pudicitia 14, in Quinti Septimi Florentis Tertulliani opera (volume I), August Reifferscheid and Georg Wissowa, 1890, pages 248–249:
 * "la"
 * 1) * 3rd C. , Tertullian, De pudicitia 14, in Quinti Septimi Florentis Tertulliani opera (volume I), August Reifferscheid and Georg Wissowa, 1890, pages 248–249:
 * "la"
 * 1) * 3rd C. , Tertullian, De pudicitia 14, in Quinti Septimi Florentis Tertulliani opera (volume I), August Reifferscheid and Georg Wissowa, 1890, pages 248–249:
 * "la"

- Vidēmus itaque hōc in locō dīvīsam apostolī sevēritātem in quendam īnflātum et in quendam incestum, in alterum virgā, in alterum sententiā armātum. Virga, quam minābātur, sententia, quam exsequēbātur; illam adhūc coruscantem, hanc statim fulminantem, quā increpābat, qua damnābat.


 * 1)  to strike or flash lightning
 * 2) * 220 – c. 130 , Marcus Pacuvius, Tragic fragments 45.5:
 * "la"

- Flamma inter nūbēs coruscat, caelum tonitrū contremit.


 * 1) * 4th C. , Saint Jerome, Vulgate Ezekiel 1:14:
 * "la"
 * 1) * 4th C. , Saint Jerome, Vulgate Ezekiel 1:14:
 * "la"

- Et animālia ībant et revertēbantur, in similitūdinem fulguris coruscantis.


 * 1) * c. 540 – c. 554 , Cassiodorus, Expositio in Psalterium 127.1 in Patrologia Latina (volume 70), Jacques-Paul Migne, 1865, page 932:
 * Sed nē forsitan timendum sōlummodo putārēs Dominum cum tonat, cum coruscat, cum terrās tremōre concutit, cum crīminōsīs minātur interitum, addidit, quī ambulant in viīs eius, ut non sōlum suspendāmur ab āctibus prāvīs, vērum etiam in fidē probēmur ambulāre rēctissimā.
 * But so that you may not consider the Lord to be feared only when He thunders, when He strikes lightning, when he threatens the sinful with death, he added “that walketh in his ways”, so that we may not only doubt in the wrong acts, but that we may also be shown worthy in faith to walk on the straightest way.
 * 1)  to flash, coruscate, gleam
 * 2) * c. 850 – 930 , Hucbald, Ecloga de calvis 142–143 in Monumenta Germaniae Historica (tome 4, fascicle 1), Paulus de Winterfeld, Berlin 1899, page 271:
 * Collūcent calvī: calvōrum cassida candet, conrutilāns caelī ceu cōpia clāra coruscat.
 * The bald are bright: their pate shines, glowing reddish it gleams like the brilliant fullness of the sky.