v. [f. L. ē out + RADIATE.]
1. intr. To shoot forth, as rays of light.
1647. H. More, Song of Soul, Notes 130/2. A kind of life eradiating and resulting both from Intellect and Psyche.
1828. in Webster; and in mod. Dicts.
† 2. trans. To give forth like rays, or in rays.
1678. Cudworth, Intell. Syst., 252. Proclus concludes, that the World was always Generated or Eradiated from God, and therefore must needs be Eternal.
1694. Norris, Refl. Ess. Hum. Und., 24. Let him tell me how any Body can eradiate such an inconceivable Number of these Effluvias.
1794. J. Hutton, Philos. Light, etc. 87. Bodies, far below the heat of incandescence, eradiate a species of light.