dayshield

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search

English[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From day +‎ shield. Compare also Old English dæġsċeald (dayshield, screen) of identical formation.

Noun[edit]

dayshield (plural dayshields)

  1. (chiefly science fiction, fantasy) A protection from daylight; a screen
    • 2011, Stephen Leigh, Crystal Memory:
      The lamps overhead were beginning to dim; in a few minutes, the dayshields would slide back, revealing the transparent canopy and allowing the remote suns to peer in—dispassionate observers hidden behind the veils of distance.
    • 2013, Lindsay J. Pryor, Blood Roses:
      Caleb continued to hold his gaze until the familiar grating of the dayshields lowering diverted his attention back over to the terrace doors.
    • 2013, Samantha Zacher, Rewriting the Old Testament in Anglo-Saxon Verse:
      The shelter of the day-shield moved across the heavens; the wise Lord had covered over the path of the sun with a sail in such a way that men dwelling on earth could not detect the mast-ropes, []
    • 2015, William King, Born of Darkness:
      “They used it but they had better weapons. Sunblades, lightspears, dayshields, armour made from sungold. They picked up the knowledge from the Angels of the Sun when they warred against the Old Ones in the Dawn Ages of the World.”