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shadows

/shad-oh/US // ˈʃæd oʊ //UK // (ˈʃædəʊ) //

影子,阴影,阴暗面,阴暗处

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a dark figure or image cast on the ground or some surface by a body intercepting light.
    • : shade or comparative darkness, as in an area.
    • : shadows, darkness, especially that coming after sunset.
    • : shelter; protection: sanctuary in the shadow of the church.
    • : a slight suggestion; trace: beyond the shadow of a doubt.
    • : a specter or ghost: pursued by shadows.
    • : a hint or faint, indistinct image or idea; intimation: shadows of things to come.
    • : a mere semblance: the shadow of power.
    • : a reflected image.
    • : the representation of the absence of light on a form.the dark part of a picture, especially as representing the absence of illumination: Rembrandt's figures often emerge gradually from the 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.
    • : 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.
    • : a dominant or pervasive threat, influence, or atmosphere, especially one causing gloom, fear, doubt, or the like: They lived under the shadow of war.
    • : an inseparable companion: The dog was his shadow.
    • : a person who follows another in order to keep watch upon that person, as a spy or detective.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to overspread with shadow; shade.
    • : to cast a gloom over; cloud: The incident shadowed their meeting.
    • : to screen or protect from light, heat, etc.; shade.
    • : to follow and observe:Spies and secret agents shadowed government officials in clandestine assignments during the Cold War.All new employees will be assigned a mentor whom they will shadow during their first week at work.
    • : to represent faintly, prophetically, etc..
    • : Archaic. to shelter or protect.
    • : Archaic. to shade in painting, drawing, etc.
adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : of or relating to a shadow cabinet.
    • : without official authority: a shadow government.

Phrases

  • shadow of one's self
  • afraid of one's own shadow
  • beyond a (shadow of a) doubt

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • The United Nations will meet for a virtual General Assembly later this month in the shadow of a looming funding crisis.

  • Rodríguez was a shadow of the active and positive person she said she used to be.

  • The shadow of Tom Brady’s long and storied Patriots career will hang over the team for the foreseeable future, even as No.

  • That shadow revealed that the middle ring is warped, swooping up on one side and down on the other.

  • Because having them come into the country and live in the shadows and have jobs that they are overqualified for, I don’t think that’s the American Dream.

  • Forty-two years after its debut, The Godfather casts a long shadow over American cinema.

  • Searchers reported seeing a large shadow on the seabed, suggesting the crashed jet has been located.

  • Brinsley came from behind a police cruiser parked on a busy street in the shadow of the Tompkins Public Houses.

  • If we begin to see the other as our possession and commodity, our shoe, the shadow of our shadow, is there ever a happy outcome?

  • They seem to belong to us, and then they freely go—behavior very uncharacteristic of a shadow or a shoe.

  • Before Ripperda could unclasp his lips to reply, the stranger had opened the door, and passed through it like a gliding shadow.

  • The man that giveth heed to lying visions, is like to him that catcheth at a shadow, and followeth after the wind.

  • She looked up in his face, leaning on his arm beneath the encircling shadow of the umbrella which he had lifted.

  • "We are going into the sunlight, out of the shadow;" and she glanced back at the west, which was of a slaty blackness.

  • He went on, ruminating on the vain shadow, into which his over-heated ambition to act and to be distinguished, had involved him.