From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishsublimesub‧lime1 /səˈblaɪm/●くろまる○しろまる○しろまる adjective1GOOD/EXCELLENTsomething that is sublime is so good or beautiful that it affects you deeplyThe view was sublime.Her songs are a sublime fusion of pop and Brazilian music.2DON'T CAREused to describefeelings or behaviour that are very great or extreme, especially when someone seems not to notice what is happening around theman air of sublime contentment —sublimely adverb —sublimeness noun [uncountable] —sublimity /səˈblɪməti/ noun [uncountable]Examples from the Corpussublime• The almondcake is particularly sublime.• We are taught, correctly, that forgiveness is sublime, but often forgiveness leaves us unjustly suspended in emotionalconflict.• I was amazed at his sublime insensitivity to other people's feelings.• But others saw it in a more sublime light.• They get compared to Kraftwerk quite a lot-mainly because their songs are based around the most sublimemelodies.• Light in texture, it is sublime served with cascades of creampoured over.• A happyholiday course in a sublimesettingsums up Ufford Park nicely.• Once the necessary control has been acquired, the two beings are fused and reach sublimespiritualjoy.sublimesublime2 noun1 →the sublime2 →from the sublime to the ridiculousExamples from the Corpussublime• It brings out the worst and the best in people, the ridiculous and the sublime.• Her wordytext clearly aims for the sublime, but it ends up collapsing into the ridiculous.• In the machine age there was little place for the sublime.• The works range from the sublime, with textured prints in iridescentgold, to humorously eccentricmeat and skycollages.• All of this may seem a digression from what this article set out to be: an inquiry into the sublime.• In the twentieth century experiences of the sublime have been extended to include those which have been made possible by technology.• It's easy to understand that the vastwildernessencouragedthoughts of the sublime.Originsublime1(1300-1400)Latinsublimis"raised above the ordinary", from limen"doorstep, threshold"