astral

adj
/ˈæstɹəl/US

Etymology

From Late Latin astralis, from Latin astrum (“star”), from Ancient Greek ἄστρον (ástron, “star”).

  1. derived from ἄστρον
  2. derived from astrum
  3. derived from astralis

Definitions

  1. Relating to or resembling the stars

    Relating to or resembling the stars; starry.

    • Some Aſtral forms I muſt invoke by prayer, / Fram'd of all pureſt Atoms of the Air; [...]
  2. Relating to an aster.

    • astral rays
    • astral sphere
  3. Composed of ethereal material or non-physical (sometimes supersensible), and capable of…

    Composed of ethereal material or non-physical (sometimes supersensible), and capable of sometimes separating from the physical body (as an astral body) to travel to other places or to other realms of existence (in or via the astral plane).

    • "[I could] see her astral form sitting on the edge of her bed. She was waiting for me."
    • [He could] see her astral projection; she looked like a celestial being, holding her hand out to him. With relief rushing through his body, he called out to her, "I've got you angel, and I'm coming!" Hammering the gas the car took off[…]
  4. + 1 more definition
    1. A supernatural being from the astral plane.

      • Now both of you sit there and wait for any guides to come to you, any astrals or people from that life to make themselves known to you.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for astral. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA