Prismatic

/prɪzˈmætɪk/ adjective

Definition

Displaying the colors of the rainbow or having the quality of breaking white light into its component colors, like sunlight through a crystal. It describes anything that reveals hidden beauty by showing multiple facets or perspectives simultaneously.

Etymology

From Greek 'prisma' meaning 'something sawn,' referring to the geometric shape that slices light into rainbows. The word entered English in the 17th century, just as scientists like Newton were discovering that white light wasn't simple at all — it was every color hiding in plain sight.

Kelly Says

Newton changed everything when he showed us that ordinary sunlight is actually EVERY COLOR AT ONCE, just waiting for the right moment to reveal its secrets! Prismatic captures that magic — the idea that simple things can hold infinite complexity. Every soap bubble, every dewdrop, every CD catching the light is showing us the hidden rainbow that's always been there. It's like the universe's way of reminding us that there's always more beauty than meets the eye.

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