lightspeed
See also: light speed
English
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editNoun
editlightspeed (countable and uncountable, plural lightspeeds)
- The speed of light (in vacuum unless another medium is specified).
- 1994, Ursula K. Le Guin, A Fisherman of the Inland Sea, Victor Gollancz (UK), published 1996, →ISBN, page 7:
- If we're going to a world a hundred light-years from here at near lightspeed, we spend according to our own perceptions, only a few minutes doing so and arrive only a few minutes older.
- 2005, W. Strawn Douglas, Oracle And Other Stories, page 134:
- He paused, then finished, “with the drive from the Linz, he can do over 500 lightspeeds to meet us.
- (colloquial, figurative) An extremely fast speed.
- 2022 October 23, Pamela Paul, “Let’s Say Gay”, in The New York Times[1]:
- In recent years, other activist terms have followed light-speed trajectories. The term “Latinx” overtook academic institutions and briefly became fashionable in the media, still prevalent in some influential publications, like The New Yorker, even though only 3 percent of Hispanics (or Latinos, if you prefer) use it.
Derived terms
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editthe speed of light
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