v. [f. L. ē out + RADIATE.]

1

  1.  intr. To shoot forth, as rays of light.

2

1647.  H. More, Song of Soul, Notes 130/2. A kind of life eradiating and resulting both from Intellect and Psyche.

3

1828.  in Webster; and in mod. Dicts.

4

  † 2.  trans. To give forth like rays, or in rays.

5

1678.  Cudworth, Intell. Syst., 252. Proclus concludes, that the World was … always Generated or Eradiated from God, and therefore must needs be Eternal.

6

1694.  Norris, Refl. Ess. Hum. Und., 24. Let him … tell me how any Body can eradiate such an inconceivable Number of these Effluvias.

7

1794.  J. Hutton, Philos. Light, etc. 87. Bodies, far below the heat of incandescence, eradiate a species of light.

8