1. radiate - Noun
2. radiate - Adjective
3. radiate - Verb
4. radiate - Adjective Satellite
To emit rays; to be radiant; to shine.
To proceed in direct lines from a point or surface; to issue in rays, as light or heat.
To emit or send out in direct lines from a point or points; as, to radiate heat.
To enlighten; to illuminate; to shed light or brightness on; to irradiate.
Having rays or parts diverging from a center; radiated; as, a radiate crystal.
Having in a capitulum large ray florets which are unlike the disk florets, as in the aster, daisy, etc.
Belonging to the Radiata.
One of the Radiata.
Source: Webster's dictionaryWhen he wanted, he could radiate charm and sincerity, but I often wonder in these later days if anything about him was as it seemed. I think now he was a man fighting constantly to escape the bars of an invisible cage. Frank Herbert
The character of instrumental music... lets the emotions radiate and shine in their own character without presuming to display them as real or imaginary representations. Franz Liszt
The goal of life is not to possess power but to radiate it. Henry Miller
We are alike in many ways, you and I. There is a darkness in us. Darkness, pain, death. They radiate from us. If ever you love a woman, Rand, leave her and let her find another. It will be the best gift you can give her. Robert Jordan
I dispersed my objects in space and got them to hold together by making them radiate forwards, out of the picture. It's all an easy interplay of chords and rhythms made up of foreground and background colours, of conducting lines, of distances and of contrasts. Fernand Léger
The radiate sun reflections and lightening cannot make a blind person see. African Proverb