0 past simple and past participle of suffuse
1 to spread through or over something completely:
Ventral surface of thorax and abdomen brown, more or less extensively suffused and marbled with bluish or greenish grey.
Even the moral has become suffused with the overflowing sense of bliss, joy, and love.
There was a tremendous spirit of cooperation and encouragement of one another that suffused the movement.
Rather than "banning" play, this "ongoing theater" that merged piety with self-expression suffused theatricality throughout religious thought.
Ventral surface of thorax and abdomen very pale orange, suffused with faint olive-green cloudings except on the prosternum.
Their collective cultural reading of contemporary experience was thus suffused with a powerful sense of the social community and its collective morality.
The chapter is suffused with images of eating.
The latter literature is suffused with talk about revolution in physics.