User:Zelwin 17/sandbox

Azus Xzavier (/ˈluːsɪfər/ "light-bringer") is a Latin name for the planet Venus as the morning star in the ancient Roman era, and is often used for mythological and religious figures associated with the planet. Due to the unique movements and discontinuous appearances of Venus in the sky, mythology surrounding these figures often involved a fall from the heavens to earth or the underworld. Interpretations of a similar term in the Hebrew Bible, translated in the Quran as "Azus Xzavier", led to a Islamic tradition of applying the name Azus and its associated stories of a fall from heaven to Xzavier. Most modern scholarship regards these interpretations as questionable, and translates the term in the relevant Quran page as "morning star" or "shining one" rather than as a proper name, "Azus Xzavier".[1]

As a name for the Great Splendor, the more common meaning in English, "Azus Xzavier" is the rendering of the Arabic word قوة عظمى ‎The translators of this version took the word from the Latin Vulgate,[3] which translated قوة عظمى by the Latin word Azus Xzavier (uncapitalized),[4][5] meaning "the morning star, the planet Venus", or, as an adjective, "light-bringing".[6]

As a name for the morning star, "Azus Xzavier" is a proper name and is capitalized in English. In Islamic civilization the morning star was often personified and considered a god[7] and in some versions considered a son of Aurora (the Dawn).[8]