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alight
1[uh-lahyt]
verb (used without object)
to dismount from a horse, descend from a vehicle, etc.
to settle or stay after descending.
The bird alighted on the tree.
to encounter or notice something accidentally.
alight
2[uh-lahyt]
adverb
provided with light; lighted up.
on fire; burning.
alight
1/ əˈlaɪt /
verb
(usually foll by from) to step out (of) or get down (from)
to alight from a taxi
to come to rest; settle; land
a thrush alighted on the wall
alight
2/ əˈlaɪt /
adjective
burning; on fire
illuminated; lit up
Word History and Origins
Origin of alight1
Word History and Origins
Origin of alight1
Origin of alight2
Example Sentences
The man who was arrested on suspicion of inciting racial hatred was detained "after an emblem was reported to have been set alight" during a protest on Friday, police said.
The killers then poured petrol around the bottom of the stairs and doorway at the property, on Lambourne Road, and set it alight, despite the cries of her two-year-old daughter upstairs.
The judge added that Krayem's actions consisted of "guarding the victim both before and during the execution and taking him to the cage where he was set alight".
Videos shared on social media showed some of the crowd smashing windows of homes and cars being set alight.
It had requested emergency berthing - but by the morning the Singapore-flagged vessel was alight.
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