Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
Lambent
Lam′bent
,Adj.
 1. 
Playing on the surface; touching lightly; gliding over. 
“A lambent flame.” Dryden. 
“A lambent style.” Beaconsfield. 
2. 
Twinkling or gleaming; fickering. 
“The lambent purity of the stars.” W. Irving.
 Webster 1828 Edition
Lambent
LAM'BENT
,Adj.
  Definition 2025
lambent
lambent
English
Adjective
lambent (comparative more lambent, superlative most lambent)
-  Brushing or flickering gently over a surface.
-  1800, William Cowper, The Task, Book VI: "The Winter Walk at Noon", Poems, J. Johnson, page 232,
- No foe to man / Lurks in the ſerpent now: the mother ſees, / And ſmiles to ſee, her infant's playful hand / Stretch'd forth to dally with the creſted worm, / To ſtroke his azure neck, or to receive / The lambent homage of his arrowy tongue.
 
 -  1977, Stephen R. Donaldson, Lord Foul’s Bane, page 77
- “As they walked together between the houses, Lena’s smooth arm brushed his. His skin felt lambent at the touch.”
 
 
 -  1800, William Cowper, The Task, Book VI: "The Winter Walk at Noon", Poems, J. Johnson, page 232,
 -  Glowing or luminous, but lacking heat.
- The lambent glow of fireflies delighted the children.
 
-  1839, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Jonathan Birch (translator), Faust: A Tragedy, Black and Armstrong, page 127,
-  The Witch, with much ceremony, fills the basin. As FAUST is about to raise it to his lips, it emits a clear flame. 
MEPHISTOPHELES. Quick! quickly down with it!—no breathing time allowed! […] And does a lambent flame prevent thee quaff? 
 -  The Witch, with much ceremony, fills the basin. As FAUST is about to raise it to his lips, it emits a clear flame. 
 -  1984, Edward Abbey, Beyond the Wall: Essays from the Outside, page 192:
- the lambent glowing light of the midnight sun. (I dislike that word lambent, but it must be employed.) A soft, benevolent radiance, you might say, playing upon the emerald green, the virgin swales of grass and moss and heather and Swede heads
 
 
 -  Exhibiting lightness or brilliance of wit; clever or witty without unkindness.
- We appreciated her lambent comments.