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Efflux   /ˈɛfləks/   Listen
noun
Efflux  n.  
1.
The act or process of flowing out, or issuing forth; effusion; outflow; as, the efflux of matter from an ulcer; the efflux of men's piety. "It is then that the devout affections... are incessantly in efflux."
2.
That which flows out; emanation; effluence. "Prime cheerer, light!... Efflux divine."



verb
Efflux  v. i.  To run out; to flow forth; to pass away. (Obs.)






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Efflux" Quotes from Famous Books



... original or final. He cannot limit himself to the contemplation of it alone, but endeavours to ascertain its position in a series to which uniform experience assures him it must belong. He regards all that he witnesses in the present as the efflux and sequence of something that has gone before, and as the source of a system of events which is to follow. The notion of spontaneity, by which in his ruder state he accounted for natural events, is abandoned; the idea that nature is an aggregate ...
— Fragments of science, V. 1-2 • John Tyndall

... appear to have been the product of brief, slight eruptions. That known as the Solfatara, though not in eruption during the historic period, is interesting for the fact that from the crevices of the rocks about it there comes forth a continued efflux of carbonic-acid gas. This substance probably arises from the effect of heat contained in old lavas which are in contact with limestone in the deep under-earth. We know such limestones are covered by the lavas of Vesuvius, for the reason that numerous blocks of the rock ...
— Outlines of the Earth's History - A Popular Study in Physiography • Nathaniel Southgate Shaler

... nature can attain to."[37] This stupendous event, however, was no "gracious contrivance," no scheme to restore lapsed men in order that God might have "a Quire of Souls to sing eternal Hallelujahs to Him"; it was just "the overflowing fountain and efflux of Almighty Love bestowing itself upon men and crowning Itself by communicating Itself."[38] The Christ who is thus divine Grace become visible and vocal is also at the same time the irresistible attraction, "strongly and forcibly moving the souls of men into a conjunction with ...
— Spiritual Reformers in the 16th & 17th Centuries • Rufus M. Jones

... unearthly beings. The men from the sea told of us, then as it were introduced Diego Colon, who spoke proudly with appropriate gesture, loving always his part of herald Mercury—or rather of herald Mercury's herald—not assuming to be god himself, but cherishing the divine efflux and the ...
— 1492 • Mary Johnston

... symbolism there seems to be a religious idea at the bottom of the recommendation to use the sputum lunae (moon spittle) or sperm astrale (star semen), star mucus, in short of an efflux from the world of light above us, as first material for the work of our illumination. [In many alchemistic recipes such things are recommended. Misunderstanding led to a so-called shooting star substance being eagerly ...
— Hidden Symbolism of Alchemy and the Occult Arts • Herbert Silberer


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