[f. prec.]

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  1.  intr. To move with splendor.

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1853.  T. Parker, Theism (1865), 116. When a star with fiery hair came splendouring through the night, it filled mediæval astronomers with amazement.

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1887.  J. Service, Life Dr. Duguid, 272. The golden language of a priceless love Went splendouring like a song of heav’n down.

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  2.  trans. To invest with splendor.

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a. 1867.  A. Smith, Life Drama, I. 49, Poems (1901), 3. ’Tis not for me To fling a Poem, like a comet, out, Far-splendouring the sleepy realms of night.

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