Numinous is from the Latin word numen, meaning "nod of the head" or "divine will" (the latter sense suggesting a figurative nod, of assent or of command, of the divine head). English speakers have been using numen for centuries with the meaning "a spiritual force or influence." The meanings of the adjective include "supernatural" or "mysterious" (as in "possessed of a numinous energy force"), "holy" ("the numinous atmosphere of the catacombs"), and "appealing to the aesthetic sense" ("the numinous nuances of her art"). There are also the nouns numinousness and numinosity, although these are rare.
Her poetry is filled with a numinous beauty. some have sensed a numinous energy in the landscape around Sedona, Arizona
Recent Examples on the WebThe creaky Romantic fantasy of the numinous artist, isolated from mundane labors, turning her back on the modern world to get in touch with higher truths, is on display.Los Angeles Times, 13 June 2022 For the sculptor Cornelia Parker, the conflagration presented a different kind of opportunity: a chance to source art supplies with a numinous backstory. Jonathon Keats, Forbes, 20 May 2022 This understanding of existence as both concrete and numinous jibed with Ellis’s photographic practice. Chris Wiley, The New Yorker, 14 Dec. 2021 Armed with the right mind-set, the familiar could become numinous. Henry Wismayer, Washington Post, 8 Sep. 2021 The book has less to do with heroic resistance than with something harder to put your finger on: the numinous, world-renewing potential that some Apache feel in Oak Flat. Max Norman, The New Yorker, 23 July 2021 Set in the fairy tale-like beauty of the Pacific Northwest, the film captures a numinous world that shimmers between the visionary and natural.BostonGlobe.com, 5 May 2021 María Elena moved through a world that was haunted by spirits, numinous presences who could give comfort and advice or demand sacrifice and appeasement.New York Times, 2 Feb. 2021 His fascination with a numinous world that may not mean anything at all: that’s his equivalent of Balzac’s greedy-eyed fascination with money. Michael Gorra, The New York Review of Books, 17 Nov. 2020 See More