illuminer
Etymology: Latin lucubrare "work at night by lamplight." The PIE root, *leuk- is behind English "light," Latin lux, lucis "light" and luna "moon," Russian luch' "ray," and Greek leukos "clear, white" and lukhnos "lamp." Of course, all words with luc- referring to light share the same source: "lucid," "elucidate," and with an -m suffix, "illuminate" and "luminary." Lucifer is based on Latin luci- + fer "light-bearer," originally referring to the morning star. "Lynx" comes from Greek lunx, in reference to the animal's shining eyes. "Lunatic" is based on Latin "luna" from the ancient notion that insanity derives from looking at the moon.partow-afgandan/afšân(i)dan
nur afšân(i)dan
illuminer
vt işıqlandırmaq; s'~ işıqlanmaq