[
US
/ˈheɪɫoʊ/
]
[ UK /hˈeɪləʊ/ ]
[ UK /hˈeɪləʊ/ ]
NOUN
-
a toroidal shape
a ring of ships in the harbor
a halo of smoke - an indication of radiant light drawn around the head of a saint
- a circle of light around the sun or moon
How To Use halo In A Sentence
- In far northern Europe, bicephalous animal motifs seem to be traceable at least as far back as the early 7th millennium B.C.
- So in 1997, he built his first portable colposcope -- a battery-powered, head-mounted binocular fashioned from surgical glasses, a bicycle halogen head light and a green camera filter. NewsObserver.com - Home
- The Marabi mangrove forests are halophyte forests distributed along the Ecuadorian Coast and located at the mouths of river systems converging on the Pacific Coast of South America. Manabí mangroves
- I wished I could sink into the water, the way the cephalopod was doing. THE BIRTHDAY OF THE WORLD
- Among these are the best specimen of the dome-skulled chalicothere Tylocephalonyx skinneri, and type specimens of several other mammals, including rodents, oreodonts and carnivores.
- Another type of light bulb you may come across is the tungsten halogen bulb.
- What's more, the mountain was haloed by phosphorescent blue bands of some sort of energy crackling all around it.
- Its addition in minute amounts to the nucleoprotein tumor fraction, was expected to suppress the formation of the fibrillar halo if nucleic acids rather that the protein were responsible for the nerve growth promoting effect elicited by this fraction. Nobel Lecture The Nerve Growth Factor: Thirty-Five Years Later
- Use hydrogen and halogens as terminal atoms (except for boranes and interhalogen compounds) and then use the least electronegative atom as the central atom.
- The molecular parameters of 12 halogenated ethanes were fit to experimental data for vapor pressure and saturated liquid density.