News1 min ago
Highlighted
16 Answers
Sunlit, Moonlit, Candlelit, Spotlit, Uplit, Floodlit...
Why not Highlit?
Why not Highlit?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Calibax. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
-- answer removed --
There's really no logic to this - it's just common usage.
However, in most cases, we used to use the "lit" form when we couldn't use the "light" form as the infinitive, e.g. you can't sunlight something.
You can, however, highlight something, therefore that thing is said to be highlighted. You can, of course, spotlight a stage and floodlight a pitch, so this distinction is effectively lost these days...
However, in most cases, we used to use the "lit" form when we couldn't use the "light" form as the infinitive, e.g. you can't sunlight something.
You can, however, highlight something, therefore that thing is said to be highlighted. You can, of course, spotlight a stage and floodlight a pitch, so this distinction is effectively lost these days...
Thanks for all your replies. Looks like it's just a usage issue as MarkRae says.
I was just intrigued as to why highlighted seems to buck the trend. As for uplit, I have certainly heard it used, in the theatre when a subject is lit from below for example but you're right, I can't find it in any dictionary so I'll delete it from my vocabulary!
I was just intrigued as to why highlighted seems to buck the trend. As for uplit, I have certainly heard it used, in the theatre when a subject is lit from below for example but you're right, I can't find it in any dictionary so I'll delete it from my vocabulary!