What does this word mean to you

First and only time with that meaning, “Boss” Tweed in Gangs of New York (set in 1862-1863, Deadwood in the 1870s).

CMC fnord!

I know basically nothing of Chinese history, other than brief brushes with mythology and art (Kwan Yin), so no, I’d never heard of the Celestial Empire. I don’t know how common knowledge it is. (In general I’m not that much of a history buff, other than bits and pieces and often related to some other primary interest, like mythology or steampunk.)

Of or related to heaven or the stars.
Synonyms: heavenly, angelic

Definitions:


Heavenly (either referring to the universe or to the religious “heaven”)
Relating specifically to stars or a star instead of to the heavens in general.
Often used in reference to music or (less often) artworks. Generally complimentary
Often used to indicate something is religious or has a religious nature or aspect. Again, often complimentary.
Possibly refers specifically to music produced by a Celesta/Celeste/Celestine (like a metal glockenspiel.)
.

Ok, that’s all I got without reverting to Google.

Can’t we get a mod to change the thread title to “Celestial = Chinese? Have you heard of this?”

This is getting silly.

Having read the thread, I now feel a bit silly.

I do want to say that while I would twig to “Celestial Empire” = China almost immediately, I certainly wouldn’t think of Celestial = Chinese unless I were prompted to make that association with context cues.

That association is in there somewhere around random names of Chinese dishes and seasoning company names, which is below even such random factoids as D&D character classes and uses in fantasy or sci-fi books, none of which I would expect the average person to think of.

I haven’t seen Toymaker, so I can’t say whether that would be enough context to make the association. I would say the most likely explanation is that the writer thought that “Celestial” made for a very good straight-up name for an otherworldly being of power, and then when filming, either the costumer or props people thought it would be fun to have the costume as a nod to those who would “get the joke” - not the initial meaning, nor intended to be insulting, just adds a layer of fun to the show like an easter egg.

OK, I’ll play. I think celestial means:

  1. adj. (a) Having to do with “the heavens”, or the sky, but mainly in the sense of how they appear to an observer standing on Earth. Hence, the celestial sphere. The apparent motions of objects in the Solar System against the background of fixed stars is explained by celestial mechanics, while orbital mechanics, by contrast, describes the actual physics of a moon or planet orbiting a larger body. Geocentric concepts of the universe from before the days of Copernicus and Galileo were fine as celestial mechanics since they explained the apparent motions, but were totally wrong as orbital mechanics. (b) By extension, the heavens as they appear to an observer on some other world, whether fact or fiction.

  2. (a) adj. An obsolete term for “Chinese”, as in the Celestial Kingdom; now considered racist. (b) n. A Chinese person, as in 10,000 Celestials came to America to help build the railroads in California. Also obsolete and racially offensive.

Well done, Spectre, you’re only the second person in the thread to think of the Chinese connection without looking it up.

heavenly, angelic, devine, astronomical, delightful

Not reading the thread: From heaven.

(I’m lying, actually, first thing I though about were those Kirby-style giant god-like characters that appear in the Marvel Universe every once in a while, but I would loathe for the entire SDMB to find out what a sad nerd I am)

Well, the impetus behind the question would seem to be an online disagreement about some details of a 46-year-old Doctor Who story, three-quarters of which is missing.

It’s possible you may have to recalibrate your definition of “sad nerd”. :smiley: