Shadows Definition–noun | 1. | a dark figure or image cast on the ground or some surface by a body intercepting light. | | 2. | shade or comparative darkness, as in an area. | | 3. | shadows, darkness, esp. that coming after sunset. | | 4. | shelter; protection: sanctuary in the shadow of the church. | | 5. | a slight suggestion; trace: beyond the shadow of a doubt. | | 6. | a specter or ghost: pursued by shadows. | | 7. | a hint or faint, indistinct image or idea; intimation: shadows of things to come. | | 8. | a mere semblance: the shadow of power. | | 10. | (in painting, drawing, graphics, etc.) | a. | the representation of the absence of light on a form. | | b. | the dark part of a picture, esp. as representing the absence of illumination: Rembrandt's figures often emerge gradually from the shadows. | | | 11. | (in architectural shades and shadows) a dark figure or image cast by an object or part of an object upon a surface that would otherwise be illuminated by the theoretical light source. Compare shade (def. 16). | | 12. | a period or instance of gloom, unhappiness, mistrust, doubt, dissension, or the like, as in friendship or one's life: Their relationship was not without shadows. | | 13. | a dominant or pervasive threat, influence, or atmosphere, esp. one causing gloom, fear, doubt, or the like:
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They lived under the shadow of war. | | 14. | an inseparable companion: The dog was his shadow. | | 15. | a person who fo
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llows another in order to keep watch upon that person, as a spy or detective. | –verb (used with object) | 16. | to overspread with shadow; shade. | | 17. | to cast a gloom over; cloud: The incident shadowed their meeting. | | 18. | to screen or protect from light, heat, etc.; shade. | | 19. | to follow (a person) about secretly, in order to keep watch over his movements. | | 20. | to represent faintly, prophetically, etc. (often fol. by forth). | | 21. | Archaic. to shelter or protect. | | 22. | Archaic. to shade in painting, drawing, etc. | –adjective | 23. | of or pertaining to a shadow cabinet. | | 24. | without official authority: a shadow government. | | From Dictionary
Fall Definition–verb (used without object) | 1. | to drop or descend under the force of gravity, as to a lower place through loss or lack of support. | | 2. | to come or drop down suddenly to a lower position, esp. to leave a standing or erect position suddenly, whether voluntarily or not: to fall on one's knees. | | 3. | to become less or lower; become of a lower level, degree, amount, quality, value, number, etc.; decline: The temperature fell ten degrees. Stock prices fell to a new low for the year. | | 4. | to subside or
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abate. | | 5. | extend downward; hang down: Her hair falls to her shoulders. | | 6. | to become lowered or directed downward, as the eyes: My eyes fell before his steady gaze. | | 7. | to become lower in pitch or volume: Her voice fell, and she looked about in confusion. | | 8. | to succumb to temptation or sin, esp. to become unchaste or to lose one's innocence. | | 9. | to lose status, dignity, position, character, etc. | | 10. | to succumb to attack: The city fell to the enemy. | | 11. | to be overthrown, as a government. | | 12. | to drop down wounded or dead, esp. to be slain: to fall in battle. | | 13. | to pass into some physical, mental, or emotional condition: to fall asleep; to fall in love. | | 14. | to envelop or come as if by dropping, as stillness or night. | | 15. | to issue forth: Witty remarks fall easily from his lips. | | 16. | to come by lot or chance: The chore fell to him. | | 17. | to come by chance into a particular position: to fall among thieves. | | 18. | to come to pass, occur, or become at a certain time: Christmas falls on a Monday this year. The rent falls due the first of every month. | | 19. | to have its proper place: The accent falls on the last syllable. | | 20. | to come by right: The inheritance fell to the only living relative. | | 21. | to be naturally divisible (usually fol. by into): The story fell into two distinct parts. | | 22. | to lose animation; appear disappointed, as the face: His face fell when he heard the bad news. | | 23. | to slope or extend in a downward direction: The field falls gently to the river. | | 24. | to be directed, as light, sight, etc., on something: His eyes fell upon the note on the desk. | | 25. | to collapse, as through weakness, damage, poor construction, or the like; topple or sink: The old tower fell under its own weight. The cake fell when he slammed the oven door. | | 26. | (of an animal, esp. a lamb) to be born: Two lambs fell yesterday. | –verb (used with object) | 27. | to fell (a tree, animal, etc.). | –noun | 28. | an act or instance of falling or dropping from a higher to a lower place or position. | | 29. | that which falls or drops: a heavy fall of rain. | | 30. | the season of the year that comes after summer and before winter; autumn. | | 31. | a becoming less; a lowering or decline; a sinking to a lower level: the fall of the Roman Empire. | | 32. | the distance through which anything falls: It is a long fall to the ground from this height. | | 33. | Usually, falls. a cataract or waterfall. | | 34. | downward slope or declivity: the gentle rise and fall of the meadow. | | 35. | a falling from an erect position, as to the ground: to have a bad fall. | | 36. | a hanging down: a fall of long hair. | | 37. | a succumbing to temptation; lapse into sin. | | 38. | the Fall, (sometimes lowercase ) Theology. the lapse of human beings into a state of natural or innate sinfulness through the sin of Adam and Eve. | | 39. | Slang. an arrest by the police. | | 40. | surrender or capture, as of a city. | | 41. | proper place: the fall of an accent on a syllable. | | 42. | Wrestling. | a. | an act or instance of holding or forcing an opponent's shoulders against the mat for a specified length of time. | | b. | a match or division of a match. | | | 43. | a hairpiece consisting of long hair that is attached to one's own hair at the crown and usually allowed to hang freely down the back of the head so as to cover or blend with the natural hair. | | 44. | an opaque veil hanging loose from the back of a hat.<
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/td> | | 46. | a decorative cascade of lace, ruffles, or the like. | | 47. | Machinery, Nautical. the part of the rope of a tackle to which the power is applied in hoisting. | | 49. | the long soft hair that hangs over the forehead and eyes of certain terriers. | | 50. | Armor. a pivoted peak projecting over the face opening of a burgonet. | | 51. | Astrology. the sign of the zodiac in which the most negative influence of a planet is expressed (as opposed to exaltation). | | 52. | Mining. rock or ore that has
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collapsed from a roof, hanging wall, or the sides of a passage. | —Verb phrases | 53. | fall away, | a. | to withdraw support or allegiance: The candidate's supporters fell away when he advocated racial discrimination. | | b. | to become lean or thin; diminish; decline. | | c. | to forsake one's faith, cause, or principles: Many fell away because they were afraid of reprisals. | | | 54. | fall back, to give way; recede; retreat: The relentless shelling forced the enemy to fall back. | | 55. | fall back on or upon, | a. | Also, fall back to. to retreat to: They fell back on their entrenchments. The troops fell back to their original position. | | b. | <
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td>to have recourse to; rely on: They had no savings to fall back on. | | 56. | fall behind, | a. | to lag, in pace or progress: We are falling behind in our work. Fatigued, some of the marchers fell behind. | | b. | to fail to pay (a debt, obligation, etc.) at the appointed time: She fell behind in her tax payments, and the property was confiscated. | | | 57. | fall down, Informal. to perform disappointingly; to disappoint; fail: He was doing well on the exam until he fell down on the last essay question. | | 58. | fall for, Slang. | a. | to be deceived by: Imagine falling for such an old trick. | | b. | to fall in love with: He's not at all the type you would expect her to fall for. | | | 59. | fall in, | a. | to fall to pieces toward the interior; sink inward. | | b. | to take one's place in the ranks, as a soldier. | | c. | Also, fall in with. to become acquainted with, esp. by chance: We fell in with an interesting couple from Paris. | | | 60. | fall off, | a. | to separate from; withdraw. | | b. | to decrease in number, amount, or intensity; diminish: Tourism falls off when the summer is over. | | c. | Nautical. to deviate from the heading; fall to leeward. | | d. | South Midland and Southern U.S. to lose weight, usually due to illness: She was sick all winter and fell off till she was just skin and bones. | | | 61. | fall on or upon, | a. | to assault; attack: The enemy fell on them suddenly from the rear. | | b. | to be the obligation of: It has fallen on me to support the family. | | c. | to experience; encounter: Once well-to-do, they had fallen on hard times. | | d. | to chance upon; come upon: I fell upon the idea while looking through a magazine. | | | 62. | fall out, | a. | to quarrel; disagree: We fell out over who was to wash the dishes. | | b. | to happen; occur: It fell out that we met by chance weeks later. | | c. |
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to leave one's place in the ranks, as a soldier: They were ordered to fall out when the parade ended. | | d. | Slang. to burst out laughing. | | e. | South Midland and Southern U.S. to become unconscious; pass out. | | | 63. | fall through, to come to nothing; fail of realization: Despite all his efforts, the deal fell through. | | 64. | fall to, | a. | to apply oneself; begin: to fall to work. | | b. | to begin to eat: They fell to and soon finished off the entire turkey. | | | 65. | fall under, | a. | to be the concern or responsibility of. | | b. | to be classified as; be includ
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ed within: That case falls under the heading of errors of judgment. | | —Idioms | 66. | fall all over oneself, to show unusual or excessive enthusiasm or eagerness, esp. in the hope of being favored or rewarded: The young trainees fell all over themselves to praise the boss's speech. Also, fall over oneself. | | 67. | fall or come short. short (def. 47). | | 68. | fall foul or afoul of. foul (def. 38). | | 69. | fall off the roof, Slang: Older Use. to menstruate. | | 70. | fall on one's feet. land (def.
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25). | | 71. | fall out of bed, to get out of bed quickly. | | 72. | fall over backward(s). | b. | to exhibit great eagerness, esp. in pursuit of one's own advantage: The candidate fell over backward in support of the issues that would win votes. | | | From Dictionary
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Related topics from Ask NewsShadows Fall rocks Pearl Street
MassLive - Found Dec. 29, 2008 Although Springfield-based metal heroes Shadows Fall may be signed to a major record label and they have toured the world many times over, they ...
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Shadows Fall delivers for fans
MassLive - Found Dec. 29, 2008 NORTHAMPTON - Although Springfield-based metal heroes Shadows Fall may be signed to a major record label and have toured the world many times over, ...
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When shadows fall
Ashtabula Star-Beacon - Found Nov. 23, 2008 ... of darkness is a major theme in the Bible, but shadows can also frame great beauty. Living in northeastern Ohio during the fall is one of the...
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When shadows fall
Ashtabula Star-Beacon - Found Nov. 22, 2008 ... of darkness is a major theme in the Bible, but shadows can also frame great beauty. Living in northeastern Ohio during the fall is one of the...
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Filmmaker Sam Wasserman Makes Feature Debut, 'The Journal,' With ...
Creative Cow - Found 2 hours ago ... in Bend, Oregon and screened at the Hollywood Film Festival last fall. ... part is the ultra-low amount of noise in the shadows - it's one of ...
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Show on serial killers shocks us into fascination
Regina Leader-Post - Found 3 hours ago Normally, I'm happy to fall into a listless trance, gravitating to Seinfeld ... Shadows of men, they're empty, the very personification of the ...
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Ivison: Ontario is becoming an increasingly Orwellian province
National Post - Found 1 hour ago The report was filed in the fall and D'Arcy's decided to contest its ... that not only was a public servant sitting in the shadows studying us, he ...
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Nationalising Tories
BBC - Found 4 hours ago ... crash will persist, the economy will contract and government income fall. ... badly needs a substantial politician to emerge from the shadows ...
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After resignation of Maria Elena Serna, 10 seek to represent Lodi ...
Lodi News-Sentinel - Found 3 hours ago 'I just felt that Delta shouldn't operate in the shadows anymore. ... serving on the board of trustees are public servants, who fall under the same
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Getting Dolled Up: Stila and Mattel Make a Deal Posted Jan 9, 2009
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Related topics from Technorati“Renovations” RENOVATIONS by Matthew Pridham copyright © 2008 / May not be reproduced without permission (from Weird Tales #348, Jan/Feb 2008) [ Read this story as a PDF ] We are lonely, so lonely. We have been alone here with our sorrows for such a long time. One hundred years have passed since last we spoke to a neighbor, and then only to fight. Surprisingly, the nights have not been the most difficult times to endure. In the darkness, the world herself seems forlorn: insects chitter and chirp aExcerpt - The Perfect Match by Susan May Warren This week, theChristian Fiction Blog Allianceis introducing The Perfect Match(Tyndale House January 1, 2009)bySusan May WarrenABOUT THE AUTHOR:Susan grew up in Wayzata, a suburb of Minneapolis, and became an avid camper from an early age. Her favorite fir-lined spot is the north shore of Minnesota is where she met her husband, honeymooned and dreamed of living.The north woods easily became the foundation for her first series, The Deep Haven series, based on a little tourist town along the shoresAuthor Betty Webb ~ Interviewed BIO: Before writing mysteries full time, Betty Webb worked as a journalist and interviewed everyone from U.S. presidents, astronauts who walked on the moon, Nobel Prize winners, the homeless, the dying, and polygamy runaways. Her Lena Jones mystery novels (Desert Noir, Desert Wives, Desert Shadows, Desert Run, and Desert Cut) are based on stories she covered as a reporter. Her humorous The Anteater of Death, the first of a series, is based on her volunteer work at the Phoenix Zoo. Betty is a memThe Fab Fifty Okay, so that last tag was fun, but it totally whet my appetite to do my own custom fit list of events. Chris already beat me to this, and I almost didn't go ahead with it after seeing hers, but then I figured ah, what the heck. Consider this the second half of my 100 things about me tag, since only fifty or so applied to me in the first half. I have had so much fun tonight listing these things out and finding pictures to illustrate them. Prairie Guy and I have taken a virtual walk down memory lV. Vale’s RE/Search newsletter January oh-nine V. Vale’s RE/Search newsletter January oh-nine January 08, 2009 By: admin Category: V. Vale’s RE/Search newsletter January oh-nine ++ “PLEASE SUPPORT US / ORDER RE/SEARCH BOOKS and T-SHIRTS! / BUY GIFTS!!” ++ WELCOME TO V. VALE’s [Abbreviated] RE/SEARCH NEWSLETTER #79, January 2009 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ RE/SEARCH | 20 Romolo #B | San Francisco CA 94133 | 415.362.1465 www.researchpubs.com | http://www.myspace.com/researchpubs | info@researchpubs.com A Certain Slant Of Light I have fallen in love with a new book. I’ve been looking all over for it so when I found it I read it at one sitting. The book is titled A Certain Slant of Light by Laura Whitcomb and I highly recommend it if you’re looking for a light evening read. But don’t let word “light” put you off because even if you’re not into this kind of books you should really give the book a try. It’s a love story with a peculiar twist and it’s like nothing you’ve ever read before. A Certain Slant of Light is orredirection Both my blog and myself are having an identity crisis. The blog has morphed into so many things that I don't know if it 'makes sense' anymore. A crafty/homeschool/mourning/loneliness blog? I struggle as to whether I should split it up and make the painful personal stuff 'personal'. I so appreciate the comfort of knowing that someone out there can hear me, though. Even though I am alone. I have no one to lean on. Someone out there knows that I am falling apart. They can't help me but they're therTops Tens of 2008 Birdsong This past year was a difficult one for me, schedule-wise, but I still managed to squeeze in a good number of films at the Palm Springs, COLCOA, Los Angeles, DocuWeek, and AFI festivals, UCLA, the American Cinematheques, AMPAS, Cinefamily, LACMA (check out Bernardo Rondeau’s top ten list here), REDCAT, and the Filmforum, not to mention the commercial Landmark and Laemmle theatres. Los Angeles remains a vibrant setting for cinephiles even if its dispersion and middling public transporPaisagens de tirar o fôlego Random Posts Placas bizarras (2) Galeria origami Como quebrar uma TV LCD com um Wiimote More Jesus, Less Religion Here I am, sitting at the best table in the house at my preferred “Mommy and Me Free” Starbucks with K.D. Lang crooning “Pullin’ Back the Reins” in that sultry voice of hers while I blog away with an iced espresso within reach. The moment is so right and good I’m having heart palpitations. If it gets better than this, don’t tell me. I might swoon. I’m hoping the first few days of the new year are going just as good for you. Seriously, I do. And if not, if the year has already felt like a bust,Shade Trees Can Trim Dollars From Your Energy Bill We have stood in the shade and felt it all along. Now, a new study has come along to prove it and equate it with energy savings. It documents the possible energy savings through the right placement of trees around a house. The study titled ‘The Value of Shade: Estimating the Effect of Urban Trees on Summertime Electricity Use’ says that trees placed on the west and south faces of a house in a hot area of California can cut back a homeowner’s summertime electric bill by about $25 annually. Not imJudging the Book: The Best Covers of 2008 by Josh Flanagan I bought hundreds of comics in the 2008, maybe more. I'm not really a cover person. If it's a book I'm already reading, quite often I don't even stop to notice the cover. Yet, that's obviously doing a disservice to myself and the amazing artists behind many of these covers. I took out all the issues I had from the last year, and pulled out the ones that struck me, the ones that stood out, the ones I remembered, and the ones that simply wowed me. Therefore I give you my BeBionic’s Best of Beauty 2008! Best of 2008 by BionicBeauty Yippee! It’s 2009! I have always been partial to January… it’s fresh, usually cool (although today it’s over 70 here, wow) and it’s my month. I’m a Capricorn and my birthday is just around the corner! But enough dilly-dallying… I’m here to give you the Bionic Beauty Best of 2008 list. These are the beauty products that rocked my world this year. I know they will be favorites for a long time to come. I’ve included links where applicable to my reviews and photos. Goodbye Inger Christensen....oh the strange poets...in every country... we are glad you came...sorry you had to go...life is just obliquities to obsequies ultimately...but somebody has to write those songs the radio doesn't sing...I learned of this passing from Brooklyn Copeland's blog.Here is an image I stole from Wiki of a house painted with one of her poems, her celebrated "Alphabet," which uses the Fibonacci sequence (as Ron Silliman did in Tjanting).here it is from wwww.erasmuspc.com in translation...with some explanation...Copenhagen CityPoem: Alfabet, Inger CAnatomy of a Commission - Oil Painting Demonstration By Donald Neff Artist Statement “I paint the places I love to be. I paint the freshness of eternal nature, icy lucid streams, thunderous waterfalls, and soaring granite crests over silent lakes. I paint the descriptions of John Muir, the echoes of Ansel Adams, the American West of Albert Bierstadt and Thomas Moran. I paint luminosity filtering through the landscape, reaching to the foundation of a stream, bouncing off rocks, and illuminating the shadows. Using oil and acrylic, painting realistically is merPhoto This will melt in your mouth... All you need is something sweet...and that's me. --Green Email: inyourmouth.melt@gmail.com Powered by: Tumblr Theme: Thought Cloud by Heather Rivers Jan 6 Tue Comments (View) (via garysreallife) Comments (View) I always have to chuckle a little when I put my headphones on and there’s music already playing from when I last took my headphones off. You gotta love Repeat. Comments (View) "Why can’Cover Happy We have a shiny new cover for Virginia Kantra’s Sea Lord, the third novel in her Children of the Sea paranormal romance series. This series revolves a unique shapeshifter culture and is one to check out. If you curious, the story begins with Kantra’s story in Shifter. The first two novels in the series are Sea Witch and Sea Fever. Sea Lord will be available May 5th. Melissa Marr is going to be talking on BlogTalkRadio this Thursday, January 8, 2009, at 6:00 p.m. EST. She’s going to be disThe 75 Skills a Real Man Should Master A man can be master in nothing, but he must be skillful in many things. Skills. You don’t have to be an expert of them all at once. You merely have to accumulate and build up a certain number of skills as the years go by. People count on you to get through the maze of life. That’s why you require these skills, to lead off. Here is a list of the 75 skills every man should be able to master: 1. Give a worthy advice in a single sentence. I got run out of a job I really liked once, and while thFourth-Quarter Earnings: How Bad? - Investors are expecting something abysmal. Could earnings that are merely bad spark a rally? We have been in an overly optimistic mode since Obama was elected, and this has been global. Toyota announces an 11 day plant closure in Japan and the Nikkei rises. Stocks rise here on individual company good news, but don’t fall on systemic bad news. Government bailouts go to banks to give them money to make loans, but pitifully little goes to the overextended borrowers. This is trying to spend our way out of a recession caused by overspending. Oh, really? This will come back to haunt us soon.The real criminals are in congress. They have always been (for the past 100 years, anyway) so dumb they would sell your kid to science for a freshly printed $1 from a crooked banker. Congressional stupidity is how the private Federal Reserve gets away with printing cash to bankroll the pre-WWII Japanese navy, the lion’s share of Hitler’s war machine, and finally funding the US industrial buildup to stop them. All that debt upon debt at interest, payable to them, of course. And that’s just one of their wars. Stealing $50B is pea |
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