English Etymology 1 Noun ray a beam of light or radiation. I saw a ray of light through the clouds. a marine fish with a flat body, large wing-like fins, and a whip-like tail. (Mathematics) a line extending indefinitely in one direction from a point. (colloquial) a tiny amount. Unfortunately he didn't have a ray of hope. Translations Catalan: raig (1), rajada (2), raig: un raig d'esperança(4) Finnish: säde (1), rausku (2), rahtunen (4) German: Strahl m (1, 3), Rochen m (2), Hoffnungsstrahl m (ray of hope) (4) Indonesian: sinar (1) Japanese: 線 (せん, sen) (1) Spanish: rayo (1), raya (2) See also manta ray giant devil ray stingray X-ray Wikipedia article on rays (mathematics) Wikipedia article on rays (fish) Etymology 2 Noun ray (Music) An anglicised spelling of re.
Noun ray a beam of light or radiation. I saw a ray of light through the clouds. a marine fish with a flat body, large wing-like fins, and a whip-like tail. (Mathematics) a line extending indefinitely in one direction from a point. (colloquial) a tiny amount. Unfortunately he didn't have a ray of hope. Translations Catalan: raig (1), rajada (2), raig: un raig d'esperança(4) Finnish: säde (1), rausku (2), rahtunen (4) German: Strahl m (1, 3), Rochen m (2), Hoffnungsstrahl m (ray of hope) (4) Indonesian: sinar (1) Japanese: 線 (せん, sen) (1) Spanish: rayo (1), raya (2) See also manta ray giant devil ray stingray X-ray Wikipedia article on rays (mathematics) Wikipedia article on rays (fish) Etymology 2 Noun ray (Music) An anglicised spelling of re.