Definify.com

Webster 1913 Edition


Dusken

Dusk′en

,
Verb.
T.
To make dusk or obscure.
[R.]
Not utterly defaced, but only
duskened
.
Nicolls.

Definition 2024


dusken

dusken

English

Verb

dusken (third-person singular simple present duskens, present participle duskening, simple past and past participle duskened)

  1. (transitive) To make dusky or obscure.
    • (Can we date this quote?), James Joyce, “From a Banned Writer to a Banned Singer”, in The Complete Works of James Joyce, published 2016:
      It was last seen and heard of by some macgillic-cuddies above a lonely valley of their reeks, duskening the greylight as it flew, its cry echechohoing among the anfractuosities: pour la dernière fois,' The blackbulled ones, stampeding, drew in their horns, all appailed and much upset, which explaints the guttermilk on their overcoats.
    • 1906, George Banghart Henry Swayze, Yarb and Cretine, page 123:
      Twilight began to dusken the quiet of the house.
    • 1550, Thomas Nichols, The hystory writtone by Thucidides the Athenyan of the warre, translation of History of the Peloponnesian War by Thucydides:
      The sayd epigrame was not utterly defaced, but only duskened or rased.
  2. (intransitive) To grow or become dusky.
    • 1801, Henry James Pye, Alfred:
      Noble you must be: noble too am I / If true the tale that Danewulf loves to tell / When twilight duskens round the crackling logs
    • 1945, Grace Livingston Hill, All Through the Night:
      He vanished so quickly that she looked down the duskening street in vain to see a stalwart officer, whom she had fully intended to accompany on his way to get a little better acquainted with him.
    • 1995, Dmitri Nabokov, “La Veneziana”, in The Stories of Vladimir Nabokov, translation of original by Vladimir Nabokov:
      When in a meadow, or, as now, in a quiet, already duskening wood, he would involuntarily begin to wonder if, through this silence, he might perhaps hear the entire, enormous world traversing space with a melodious whistle, the bustle of distant cities, the pounding of sea waves, the singing of telegraph wires above the deserts.