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"sunny hare"

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(@Anonymous)
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Hello! I ask looking for a word describing the small, moving reflections cast on the wall by a shiny object, such as a watch face. The sort of dancing spot of light that might entertain a student, or annoy a teacher during a class.  

 

I ask because a co-worker told me of such a word existing in Russian, which translates to "sunny hare" in English, presumably for the way the light hops around. Does anyone know of a similar word or expression?

 

Thank you!

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The Russian phrase you allude to, Солнечный зайчик, also has a more prosaic meaning: sunbeam. While I would like to think that Russian has a phrase dedicated to such a charming phenomenon, that's not really the case.

So maybe in English you could coin a apt phrase. Dancing sunbeam? Sunbeam spark?

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The adjective "lambent" may fit this.   I have also heard the term "light play"

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(@polistra)
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When I'm unsure of a foreign idiom, Google Images will often give a clue.   In this case it yields a lot of literal sunny rabbits AND a lot of dancing sunbeams like this:

 

http://www.stihi.ru/2009/12/25/7971

 

But I can't think of an English equivalent either.   The old word 'mote' sometimes gets close in poetry, but in modern times it seems to be mainly reserved for astronomical uses.

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I'm aware of mote as a speck, as of dust, that may gleam in a sunbeam, but nothing like the reflection on a wall from a framed picture or the surface of the water in a fish tank. I'm unaware of any astronomical use of the word outside of the title of the Larry Niven-Jerry Pournelle novel The Mote in God's Eye,  which is a Biblical allusion to a tiny speck. I'd love to hear of another usage.

Peter

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