A column of light (as from a beacon)
The syllable naming the second (supertonic) note of any major scale in solmization.
Extend or spread outward from a center or focus or inward towards a center.
1It now has an eight-point safety check protocol that includes x-raying the batteries.
2For the above reasons, we have decided to discontinue the X-raying of candy.
3Her eyes were brown with lines of reddish gold raying from the pupils.
4Great red roses, passionate carnations, raying daisies, violets, and curly hyacinths.
5Mr Silcock said the move away from x-raying all luggage at airports should be reversed.
6The Mars Center and Deenmor forts were wasting no power raying a ship at that distance.
7A garish appeal, no doubt: a few raying spokes of colour, and the vision has gone.
8They were always testing, probing and x-raying me.
9Primary Industries Minister Nathan Guy said x-raying at the border was not the answer to minimise biosecurity threats.
10He did a most thorough job of x-raying Stephen's broken bones, even those he had not set himself.
11The Cross is an eternal power, raying out light and love over all humanity and through all ages.
12So, brethren, a universal attraction is raying out from Christ's Cross, and from Himself to each of us.
13The "cobwebby feeling" of the fingers might mean an actual raying-out of some subtle form of matter.
14Then the bird which had carried me thither shook and became a young lady bright as sun raying light.
15Cease raying-nouse wasting power.
16So, looking upward to the heavens, he beheld the Infinite Buddha, high and lifted up in a great raying glory.