| 释义 |
telluric /tɛˈljʊərɪk /adjective1Of the earth as a planet.These stones, or these steeples, are working in tandem with the earth's telluric energies coming up from the wells....- Yet Hepworth consistently professed a Romantic attitude of emotional affinity with nature, speaking of carving both as a ‘biological necessity’ and as an ‘extension of the telluric forces which mould the landscape’.
- Let's see, and we also call this period the Anthropogene, the era in which mankind's activities became a ‘new telluric force which in power and universality may be compared to the greater forces of earth’.
1.1Of the soil.I do not experiment with telluric energies or sacred geometry. Origin Mid 19th century: from Latin tellus, tellur- 'earth' + -ic. Rhymes Rurik, sulphuric (US sulfuric), Zürich |