[
UK
/fˈeɪd/
]
[ US /ˈfeɪd/ ]
[ US /ˈfeɪd/ ]
NOUN
-
a golf shot that curves to the right for a right-handed golfer
he took lessons to cure his slicing - gradually ceasing to be visible
VERB
-
become feeble
The prisoner has been languishing for years in the dungeon -
disappear gradually
The pain eventually passed off -
lose freshness, vigor, or vitality
Her bloom was fading -
become less clearly visible or distinguishable; disappear gradually or seemingly
The tree trunks are melting into the forest at dusk
The scene begins to fade
How To Use fade In A Sentence
- Striking that balance between old and new will always be difficult, but after a few numbers here, memories of their old bandmaster begin to fade.
- Life can not fade , the multiple spot color can't accommodate oneself to wonderful just now best,alive.
- The sky began to clear and there were puffy white clouds forming as the evening faded away.
- Ribs are straight or slightly biconcave and fade on the ventral surface where they merge into the lateral keel.
- copasetic" [used so nicely in "West L.A. Fadeaway"] -- and such stunts as dancing down Broadway in 1939 from Columbus Circle to 44th Street in celebration of his sixty-first birthday. The Annotated "Alabama Getaway"
- The grass looked like an old worn carpet, faded and ragged; the horizon was pressing against the cliff.
- Faulkner wore jeans faded at the knees, a broad hat, and photochromic sunglasses.
- It packs motorized faders, multifunction rotary encoders and a host of keys.
- To meet the inherent challenge of harmonizing a variety of capabilities in a group endeavor, Chicago proposed, and all the needleworkers agreed, to use the same background color fade, the same techniques and a common border.
- Summer had faded into fall, but even as September wore on Paris still baked under a strange late heat wave that showed no sign of letting up.