All lit up synonyms
lit up
L l verb lit up
- illuminate β to make lucid or clear; throw light on (a subject).
- give off β to present voluntarily and without expecting compensation; bestow: to give a birthday present to someone.
- lighten β to become less severe, stringent, or harsh; ease up: Border inspections have lightened recently.
- illuminate β to make lucid or clear; throw light on (a subject).
- clear up β When you clear up or clear a place up, you tidy things and put them away.
- light up β something that makes things visible or affords illumination: All colors depend on light.
- flash β a precedence code for handling messages about initial enemy contact or operational combat messages of extreme urgency within the U.S. military.
- highlight β to emphasize or make prominent.
- brighten β If someone brightens or their face brightens, they suddenly look happier.
- spotlight β a strong, focused light thrown upon a particular spot, as on a small area of a stage or in a television studio, for making some object, person, or group especially conspicuous.
- shine β to give forth or glow with light; shed or cast light.
- put on β a throw or cast, especially one made with a forward motion of the hand when raised close to the shoulder.
- turn on β to cause to move around on an axis or about a center; rotate: to turn a wheel.
- beam β If you say that someone is beaming, you mean that they have a big smile on their face because they are happy, pleased, or proud about something.
- transmit β to send or forward, as to a recipient or destination; dispatch; convey.
- diverge β to move, lie, or extend in different directions from a common point; branch off.
- diffuse β to pour out and spread, as a fluid.
- glisten β to reflect a sparkling light or a faint intermittent glow; shine lustrously.
- wink β to close and open one or both eyes quickly.
- flicker β to burn unsteadily; shine with a wavering light: The candle flickered in the wind and went out.
- shimmer β to shine with or reflect a subdued, tremulous light; gleam faintly.
- blink β When you blink or when you blink your eyes, you shut your eyes and very quickly open them again.
- sparkle β to issue in or as if in little sparks, as fire or light: The candlelight sparkled in the crystal.
- glint β a tiny, quick flash of light.
- glow β a light emitted by or as if by a substance heated to luminosity; incandescence.
- illumine β Light up ; brighten.
- gleam β a flash or beam of light: the gleam of a lantern in the dark.
- burnish β To burnish the image of someone or something means to improve their image.
- polish β to make smooth and glossy, especially by rubbing or friction: to polish a brass doorknob.
- kindle β (of animals, especially rabbits) to bear (young); produce (offspring).
- intensify β to make intense or more intense.
- ignite β to set on fire; kindle.
- irradiate β to shed rays of light upon; illuminate.
- fire β combustion
- light β a light product, as a beer or cigarette.
- spot β a rounded mark or stain made by foreign matter, as mud, blood, paint, ink, etc.; a blot or speck.
- illume β to illuminate.
- floodlight β an artificial light so directed or diffused as to give a comparatively uniform illumination over a rather large given area.
- animate β Something that is animate has life, in contrast to things like stones and machines which do not.
- inflame β to kindle or excite (passions, desires, etc.).
- cast β The cast of a play or film is all the people who act in it.
- flood β a great flowing or overflowing of water, especially over land not usually submerged.
- ramify β have complex branches
- proliferate β spread
- shed β Textiles. (on a loom) a triangular, transverse opening created between raised and lowered warp threads through which the shuttle passes in depositing the loose pick.
- ramble β to wander around in a leisurely, aimless manner: They rambled through the shops until closing time.
- disseminate β to scatter or spread widely, as though sowing seed; promulgate extensively; broadcast; disperse: to disseminate information about preventive medicine.
- afford β If you cannot afford something, you do not have enough money to pay for it.
- issue β the act of sending out or putting forth; promulgation; distribution: the issue of food and blankets to flood victims.
- distribute β to divide and give out in shares; deal out; allot.