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liminal space

American  
[lim-uh-nl speys] / ˈlɪm ə nl ˈspeɪs /

noun

  1. a state or place characterized by being transitional or intermediate in some way: In the film, Venice is a liminal space where the real and imaginary meet.

    Motels are such liminal spaces—everyone there is either coming or going.

    In the film, Venice is a liminal space where the real and imaginary meet.

  2. Informal.  any location that is unsettling, uncanny, or dreamlike.

    The classroom when school is out for the summer is a liminal space.


Etymology

Origin of liminal space

First recorded in 1970–75

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

I merged onto Highway 101 South just after 1 a.m., and found myself almost alone on the six-lane expressway, hurtling through an endless and open liminal space, through pools of pale-orange public lighting, past signals blinking to no one.

From The Wall Street Journal

He was, in a sense, living in the liminal space of Halloween.

From Salon

She leaves plenty of blood and gore on the page, which explains why “Somebody Is Walking on Your Grave” feels like a departure: It confronts mortality in a warm, inviting tone, embracing the liminal space between the dead and living.

From Los Angeles Times

But it was in fact a breeding ground of artistic ferment, in which creatives grappled with what Elie calls crypto-religion, that “liminal space between belief and disbelief” that produced a wealth of thought-provoking popular art.

From Los Angeles Times

That liminal space that Elie describes between belief and disbelief has closed, at least for the time being.

From Los Angeles Times