Ordinary light, as we see it with the eye, is capable of being reflected, as when we look into a mirror at an angle.
In both cases the handling of an ordinary light letter is taken as the standard with which the rate of handling other articles is compared.
The hypothesis therefore is, that every ray of ordinary light consists of two rays vibrating in different planes; and that these rays, separated one from the other, have the physical conditions which we call polarized.
In the case of ordinary light we are to figure the ether-particles as vibrating in all directions, or azimuths, as it is sometimes expressed, across this line.
We have to illustrate the two-sidedness of that green light, in contrast to the all-sidedness of ordinary light.
Were the heavenly azure like the ordinary light of the sun, the turning of the prism would have no effect upon it; it would be transmitted equally during the entire rotation of the prism.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "ordinary light" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.