How To Use Limn In A Sentence

  • Enhanced algae growth in the reservoir consumes the oxygen in the epilimnion and, as it decays, the mass sinks to the already oxygen-deficient hypolimnion, where decay processes reduce the oxygen concentration even further, resulting in acid conditions at lower levels and the dissolution of minerals from the reservoir bed. Chapter 8
  • The distribution, water chemistry, ecology, hydrology, limnology, and invertebrate and amphibian fauna of vernal ponds have been investigated.
  • American to really make a rather grand style out of what was actually rather liny and plain and, you know -- and came out of the New England limner tradition. American Visions: The Epic History of Art in America
  • Rather call the dusky and dark-haired Twilight, whose pensive face is limned against the western hills, by the name of that fierce and fervid Noon that stands erect under the hot zenith, instinct with the red blood of a thousand summers, casting her glittering tresses abroad upon the south-wind, and holding in her hands the all-unfolded rose of life. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 03, No. 16, February, 1859
  • It is LeWitt's world, of course, but in its vast accumulation of specifics, it somehow limns the general, and the resulting work could be a composite view of the life of any artist in the late 20th century.
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  • Here the main event is limned large on the picture plane.
  • Tangential factoids, unrhymed chiming, and wanton speculation: New York Times book reviewer Michiko Kakutani is somehat, er, somewhat known for her frequent use of the word limn, apparently it's an inside joke among writers and critics. Languagehat.com: THE PERILS OF A FANCY VOCABULARY.
  • The length and the slimness which is part of the nature of this kind of poulp explain the exception. On the Parts of Animals
  • The picture of him limned itself on her inner vision, and before she was aware she was pleasuring in the memory of the grace of his magnificent body, of his splendid shoulders, of the power in him that tossed her lightly on a horse, bore her safely through the thundering breakers, or towed her at the end of an alpenstock up the stern lava crest of the House of the Sun. ALOHA OE
  • Although not as strong this season as he was last, his mix of military and matelot, flouncy frills and soigné slimness will be popular in the Hamptons.
  • Instead, we listened to tributes that limned his capacity to touch and generosity of spirit, his impact, his love of words, his insatiable curiosity and, most importantly, the empathy and warmth that fueled his writing and the relationships in which he luxuriated. Andrew S. Doctoroff: The Last Lecture Given by Our Good Friend Jeff Zaslow
  • An impression came to him, then, of Lily laying fast asleep, limned in moonlight, safe and oblivious.
  • Rice-Paddy Herb Rice-paddy herb is an aquatic plant in the snapdragon family, Limnophila chinensis ssp. aromatica, a native of Asia and the Pacific islands, whose small leaves are used in Southeast Asian fish dishes, soups, and curries, especially in Vietnam. On Food and Cooking, The Science and Lore of the Kitchen
  • I'm very worried about how news of this journey will be limned to others, if I don't make it.
  • Here again the icon serves to limn the artifice of time, drawing to this one still point a broad synaxis of the blessed, including some whose souls unbodied have preceded her to Paradise. Scott Cairns: The Dormition of the Mother of God
  • The limnetic zone is well-lighted (like the littoral zone) and is dominated by plankton, both phytoplankton and zooplankton. Freshwater biomes
  • Denitrification only occurs at low oxygen levels, and hence is typically restricted to sediments, although it also occurs in the deoxygenated hypolimnia of some lakes. Chemical properties of lakes
  • The black fatality of those words seemed to stand out, stark and clear in the deep night, as though limned with her own life's blood.
  • Hypolimnas bolina is a tropical and sub-tropical nymphalid species that is known for its aggressive territorial mate-locating behavior.
  • In eutrophic lakes that are stratified, concentrations of N2 may decline in the epilimnion because of reduced solubility as temperatures rise and increase in the hypolimnion from denitrification of nitrate (NO3) to nitrite (NO2) to inorganic nitrogen (N2). Chemical properties of lakes
  • The UBC study involved new species found in British Columbia lakes that have evolved distinct physical traits: limnetic sticklebacks (smaller open water dwellers with narrow mouths), benthic sticklebacks (larger bottom dwellers with a wide gape) and a generalist species to represent the probable ancestor of the two species. Undefined
  • In oligotrophic (unproductive) lakes that undergo thermal stratification in the summer, the oxygen content of the epilimnion decreases as the water temperature increases. Chemical properties of lakes
  • Larger and deeper lakes, with oxygenated hypolimnions, will also have one or two larger salmonids, usually lake trout or landlocked Atlantic salmon, along with burbot and slimy sculpin.
  • Joan Brown's irreverent explorations of the conflicted roles associated with femininity make her seem as well a kind of godmother to contemporary Bad Girl artists such as Karen Kilimnik and Nicole Eisenman.
  • Two samples were taken culated at the observed water temperatures and then corrected within the epilimnion when it was ≤ 15 m thick; Recently Uploaded Slideshows
  • The artist limned a good likeness of his wife.
  • Homes and hills, roads and valleys lay on the other side, limned in gold by the clear, late light.
  • Temperature dependency of long-chain alkenone distributions in recent to fossil limnic sediments and in lake waters. New Content on CO2 Science
  • It is probably a bit too harsh to call those upset by The Baltimore Sun's recent use of the word limn in a headline word-haters, but I assume they'd be even more offended by the fancy word misologists. Boston Globe -- Ideas section
  • There's a kind of antiqued texture to it that cannot be captured in a picture, and there are these subtle prints of wallpaper flowers flecked here and there, and some limned in delicate etchings of gold.
  • Iron was remobilized and limned specular hematite, along with epidote, actinolite/tremolite, and andradite.
  • The barrier began to waver, cracks limned in shifting coronae of flame appearing as more and more shots dumped their freezing charges into the shield, taxing Ramirez to the limit.
  • This area is important for waders, including the Asian dowitcher Limnodromus semipalmatus (R), a rare winter migrant. Sundarbans National Park, India
  • Limnoperna fortunei can attach to the inner walls of raw water pipe by thread-like byssus and reproduced rapidly, resulting in clogging of pipe and valves.
  • The endemic frogs include Limnodynastes depressus, Litoria cavernicola, L. splendida, Uperoleia aspera, U. minima, U. crassa, U. marmorata, U. mjobergi, U. talpa and U. variegata. Kimberly tropical savanna
  • Ivey's gradual meltdown from confident banterer to disheveled mutterer is valiantly limned, layered with dozens of revealing looks signaling fear and frustration.
  • Such making is not absorption, does not incur other languages, exports little but the traveler's shoestring budget, imports only what self can be limned, unappropriated, in the discipline of knowledge and generous attention.
  • Braunau in 1889 has medieval fortifications and broken Gothic arches limned with moonlight.
  • Diatoms as indicators of climatic and limnological change in Swedish Lapland: a 100-lake calibration set and its validation for paleoecological reconstructions. Historical changes in freshwater ecosystems in the Arctic
  • Larger and deeper lakes, with oxygenated hypolimnions, will also have one or two larger salmonids, usually lake trout or landlocked Atlantic salmon, along with burbot and slimy sculpin.
  • Soldiers marching with baggage, when they once enter on the southern or Pisidian route 3o miles west of the Limnai, must go on past the double lake.
  • The report limned a desperate situation.
  • Salinity, temperature, and dissolved oxygen strata were measured in each basin of each lake, again to compare abiotic limnology across lakes and over time at Ogac Lake.
  • It's a delightful book, filled with colorful characters quickly but deftly limned.
  • It was limned by Master Robert Tielhard himself, before he died; it is a crime now, to duplicate it for any but an anguissette. Kushiel's Avatar
  • The prevailing westerly summer winds cause a thick epilimnion to develop at the southeastern end of the lake, whereas an absent or thin epilimnion is present in the western end. Lake Ontario, Ontario
  • It sounds like the elixir of life: a wonder drug that promotes youth, slimness and sexual allure at the same time as protecting against heart disease and cancer.
  • Whatever the answer, how much more complex the alchemical process between actor and performance when the actor is called upon to give voice to a character hitherto limned only by the comments of others?
  • I think it is part of Dadd's predilection for double-speak and dangerous puns: "Elimination" contains the word "limn" which is a good word for painting, but also is part of Dadd's habit of decrying painting as pointless and worthless. The Guardian World News
  • The tempo of scientific investigation increased rapidly after 1938, with emphasis on specialized fields such as limnology, wildlife management, ecology, pedology and archeology. Waterton Lakes National Park, Canada
  • The metalimnetic oxygen maximum distribution occurs when the oxygen content in the metalimnion is supersaturated in relation to levels in the epilimnion and hypolimnion. Chemical properties of lakes
  • The lake's water is permanently stratified, having a warm epilimnion overlying a cooler hypolimnion and is remarkably clear. Lake Malawi National Park, Malawi
  • MeHg accumulated in the hypolimnion of Lake 240 when oxygen was present.
  • What we have is clearly limned like the work of a master lapidary.
  • He analogized entropy -- psychic/physical/sexual -- in gorgeous, assaulting, crevassing paint limning bodies torqued by forces inside and outside of them. Marlena Doktorczyk-Donohue: Obit for Two: A Reflection on Dying, Culture, Lucien Freud and Amy Winehouse
  • As is characteristic of Johns's graphic work of this time, the drawings feature freehand scribbles, carefully limned curves, erasures and tonal blurring.
  • For the higher concentrations of nitrate and oxygen in the hypolimnion during weeks 15 to 25, another mechanism might be efficacious.
  • The result is a study that, while less than comprehensive, ably limns most of the major issues of the Great Lakes in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
  • Experiments were conducted in the epilimnion of a high-UV system at midday and in late afternoon.
  • 7, The Baltimore Sun used the word limn in a front-page headline ("Opposing votes limn difference in race"). Boston Globe -- Ideas section
  • This kind technique of observation is a leap of eco-environmental monitoring. Undoubtedly, it will exert profound influence on the limnology and geosciences.
  • The choice is made on the basis of their international significance in terms of ecology, botany, zoology, limnology, or hydrology.
  • I think your use of the word "limned" is profound. Some old lover's ghost
  • Also contributing to this eating disorder is a societal ideal slimness that the adolescent strives to emulate.
  • But critics do have a point: the Sun's headline would have performed a lot better on the web if "limn" had been swapped out for "Justin Bieber. Baltimore Sun's Use Of English Language Confuses Readership
  • The artist limned a good likeness of his wife.
  • O Harrogate, upon your bed, and there all my memory dislimns and decays. A Miscellany of Men
  • Among many others we may particularise the fragrant white-flowered alyssum, the blue, dark purple, spotted, and white varieties of nemophila, white and pink virginian stock, and the large yellow buttercup-like flowered limnanthes. Little Folks (November 1884) A Magazine for the Young
  • The oxygen content of the hypolimnion is higher than that of the epilimnion because the saturated colder water from spring turnover experiences limited oxygen consumption. Chemical properties of lakes
  • Through months of campaigning and 18 debates, the Republican presidential candidates have limned a range of issues -- from taxation and corporate personhood to abortion and gay marriage, even open marriage. Annette Fuentes: Where's Education in the Republican Candidates' Slugfest?
  • Increased water temperatures generally and seasonally, but ultimately a decrease in summer habitat (e.g., deeper thermoclines in lakes, shrunken hypolimnia in lakes, reduced colder waters in rivers) are likely to reduce available habitat and decrease fish productivity, resulting in fish movements to deeper areas and/or fatal stresses on some fish species (e.g., Impacts on arctic freshwater and anadromous fisheries
  • Beasts, vipers and monsters descend upon a mildmannered-looking man, likely a self-portrait, while a giant, sinuous snake, limned by several wavy lines of paint, hovers overhead.
  • The rural setting mattered, I think, for my father in each case because it limned that transition more evocatively than might have been otherwise possible.
  • Nearly every song on A Treasury is a show-stopper, and the track selection is fine, spotlighting Drake's weighty insights and limning the various complexions of his character.
  • In nineteen fragmented chapters riddled with ellipses, the novel limns the discrete and sometimes discomforting spectrum of desire awakened by intimations of mortality.
  • And now, when you put that into Google, all the top results refer to the confusion that the word "limn" caused the city of Baltimore. Baltimore Sun's Use Of English Language Confuses Readership
  • The clinker-built whaler lay trapped between the twin worlds of darkling sea and shadow-limned night.
  • Teachout, an estimable critic, biographer, and former jazzbo, draws on newly available recordings and writings to limn the fullest portrait to date of the most popular and beloved figure in 20th-century music. Cover to Cover
  • I feel certain the purpose of the slimness stems from the natural instinct to shoal in a compact body.
  • One of the last things that registered on Dave's perception as his vision faded was a flickering black nimbus of energy limning the creature's form.
  • It belongs to a section of the Iris family called Limniris, which also includes closely-related I. lazica 3 and British native I. foetidissima (gladdon, or stinking iris).
  • Current diversity changes with latitude in the Arctic, excluding limnic and marine animals (compiled and modified from Matveyeva and Chernov.) Implications of current species distributions for future biotic change in the Arctic
  • The broad expanse of shirt-front, with its delicate embroidery, not obtrusively splendid, but minutely elaborate rather, involving the largest expenditure of needlework to produce the smallest and vaguest effect -- a suspicion of richness, as it were, nothing more; the snowy cambric contrasts with the bronzed visage of the soldier, or blends harmoniously with the fair complexion of the fopling, who has never exposed his countenance to the rough winds of heaven; the expanse of linen proclaims the breadth of chest, and gives a factitious slimness to the waist. The Lovels of Arden
  • The serene yet bold, contemporary forms are clad in marine plywood panels, limned in metal flashing that glints in the powerful sunlight.
  • The shining ship swam serenely through the upper atmosphere, light limning its skin in shafts of golden brilliance as they sailed towards the barriers ahead, proud and uncaring.
  • Here again the icon serves to limn the artifice of time, drawing to this one still point a broad synaxis of the blessed, including some whose souls unbodied have preceded her to Paradise. Scott Cairns: The Dormition of the Mother of God
  • The repulsive, malformed heads were all pop eyes and gaping mouths, the latter limned with greasy, saclike lips. Into the Thinking Kingdoms
  • Little light penetrates all the way through the limnetic zone into the profundal zone. Freshwater biomes
  • The career limned in Four Trials shows a dedication to helping others, a deep reservoir of empathy for the unfortunate, and a passion for justice.
  • The limner was never solely a miniaturist, but worked in other formats and media too.
  • The sampling depth of 1.5 m was near the midpoint of the epilimnion depth in each lake.
  • The choice is made on the basis of their international significance in terms of ecology, botany, zoology, limnology, or hydrology.
  • The amount of bacterial cells imported via the inlets in relation to bacterioplankton cells produced in the epilimnion of the lakes was also determined.
  • Although its higher taxonomy remains controversial, E. texana has been placed in the family Limnadiidae with two other genera and 15 congeners.
  • One of the more intriguing and challenging developments in ecology and in limnology and oceanography is the expansion of the temporal and spatial scales that are being addressed by current work.
  • The bioenergetics model used by McDonald M.E. et al. [35] projects that a 3°C rise in July epilimnetic (surface mixed-layer) temperatures could cause young-of-the-year lake trout to require eight times more food than at present just to maintain adequate condition. Changes in aquatic biota and ecosystem structure and function in the Arctic
  • Just a thought: The word 'limen' is often associated these days with margins 'liminality' is frequently defined as a state of existence 'in the margins', and medieval manuscripts were illuminated, or limned, in the margins of the page. Languagehat.com: THE PERILS OF A FANCY VOCABULARY.
  • Strictly defined, "limn" is a verb that means "to draw or paint on a surface" or "to outline in clear sharp detail. Baltimore Sun's Use Of English Language Confuses Readership
  • Diary posits her as a threat to the insularity of the Monteils and their vapid way of life, a threat Moreau coolly limns in one of her most nuanced, restrained performances.
  • At each pond, we took two replicate water samples from the epilimnion using an integrated depth sampler; we took samples from the surface to 1.25 m in Monday Bog and to 1.75 m in Wednesday Bog.
  • There in the distance a cloud dislimns which but now lured me to death with its girlish smile. The Indian Lily and Other Stories
  • Every shape was limned with palest gold; the air seemed full of the promise of summer and the fragrance of the roses that climbed up the side of the old classic front of the Directorate Palace.
  • The Chinese societies for palaeontology, oceanography and limnology, and geophysics are later creations, dating from the late 1940s.
  • - Average daily out fl ow from Glen Canyon Dam (Lake concentrations in the hypolimnia of the 2 different types of Powell), 1991-2006. Recently Uploaded Slideshows
  • Bio-energetic modeling of juvenile populations of lake trout in the epilimnion of Toolik Lake suggests that they will not survive a 3°C increase in mean July epilimnetic temperatures given existing ration, and would require a greater than eight-fold increase in food to achieve historical end-of-year sizes [16]. Climate change effects on arctic freshwater fish populations
  • A wanderer in the vast Nevada desert comes upon yet another rock formation, a mass of craggy geometric shapes limned in the gentle hues that express eons of sedimentation.
  • In less than two seconds the Portal was open, a perfect circle, limned eerily by writhing feathers of blue coronal discharge.
  • Rack behind, leave not a, 43. desire is a perpetual, 188. dislimns, 158. of a too easy chair, 332. of this tough world, 149. the value, being lost we, 53. Familiar Quotations A Collection of Passages, Phrases, and Proverbs Traced to Their Sources in Ancient and Modern Literature
  • The chemistry of the two parts of a freshwater lake, the epilimnion and the hypolimnion, is affected by biological processes and by circulation.
  • hatchelled" on the sky in minute lines and limnings. Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science Volume 26, September, 1880
  • The figure passed on to the stairhead, where it was limned momentarily against the faint glow that came up from below, and at the glimpse of that vague black image against the red, she almost fainted. The Conquering Sword of Conan
  • This oxygen distribution results most often when oxygen consumption from decomposition exceeds oxygen inputs as the rate of organic matter sinking from the epilimnion is slowed upon entering the colder, denser metalimnetic water, allowing greater time for decomposition to occur in this layer of water. Chemical properties of lakes
  • The mean acoustic size of rising bubbles decreased in the hypolimnion but increased in the epilimnion.
  • Is there a bare minimum of representation that we can respond to as fully limning us?
  • Women aren't oozing contentment either, though slimness is not always a desired trait.
  • I am grateful for the compliment," she said; and in those long gray eyes of hers were limned and coloured all the satisfaction, and self-certitude and answering complacency of power that constitute so large a part of the seductive mystery and mastery that is possessed by woman. CHAPTER XIX
  • These lakes have permanent thermoclines, small littoral zones, and deep hypolimnia.
  • The story limns the unforgiving and often repressive claims of memory and family tradition in unresolved discord.
  • The sampling depth of 1.5 m was near the midpoint of the epilimnion depth in each lake.
  • Included along with the transcript is a chronology of Champ sightings, notes on the limnology of Lake Champlain, and some reprints of historical newspaper accounts involving Champ-related phenomena. Archive 2007-08-01
  • As is characteristic of Johns's graphic work of this time, the drawings feature freehand scribbles, carefully limned curves, erasures and tonal blurring.
  • However, in a few localities, an inverse process has been observed, such as in Caño Mánamo (Delta Amacuro), where mangroves have expanded at a rate of 6 - 7 ha/year since 1965, when a cofferdam was built, leading to the salinization of the formerly limnetic waters. Coastal Venezuelan mangroves
  • What we have is clearly limned like the work of a master lapidary.
  • That is especially true of business journalism, which - at its best - limns both the outsize frailties of men and the hidden drama of numbers.
  • The film limned his fitness regime, work ethic, first marriages, and the tragic overdose of his daughter Catya. Regina Weinreich: Vidal Sassoon: The Movie on a Bad Hair Night
  • limnology is essentially a synthetic science composed of elements...that extend well beyond the limits of biology
  • Her figures and landscapes are not minutely limned in, as in the miniature tradition, each with a definite attribute and place in the cosmos.
  • Her dress was tightly belted, accentuating the slimness of her waist.
  • However, as Mr Lebrato and Dr Jones report in Limnology and Oceanography, when they analysed thaliacean tissues they found that the creatures were one-third carbon by weight.
  • Recent studies [76] show no change in water quality over time but do show a subtle shift in diatom assemblages as evidenced in the paleolimnological record. Historical changes in freshwater ecosystems in the Arctic
  • A key image for the film because it limns Kane's elusive real self, but also a key moment in film and literature for the transition from the modern to the postmodern.
  • Watteau -- Watteau the painter -- not that superficies which is more or less familiar to every hack, be he limner or penman, who dabbles in the eighteenth century. Since Cézanne
  • In experiments, jojoba substitutes have been made from the oils of plants such as crambe, limnanthus (meadowfoam), lunaria, and rapeseed. 7 Commercial Uncertainties
  • I'm so pleased to report the well written script sent me scuttling to the dictionary several times with vocabulary-above-a-ninth grade-level, like scutes, limn and I love saying this word feculence. Filmstalker: Clash of the Titans script review
  • In the West, a surplus of food supply has made obesity the main concern of adults, and slimness has been regarded as a symbol of health and beauty.
  • Unlike most of the nebulas that populate the universe, these clouds are limned by arcs or tings and bathed in the blue light emitted by helium ions.
  • Goodrich limned some of her biography into her last known self-portrait, where she fashioned herself as an artist at work at her easel.
  • Total consumption rates on benthos were divided by the littoral area based on hypsometric and limnological data.
  • William Safire, back in 2002, called limn a "vogue word" and gave it a life span of Boston Globe -- Ideas section
  • Boston's weirder early '80s contours, like the snaky lunacy of The Freeze, get limned as well.
  • He analogized entropy -- psychic/physical/sexual -- in gorgeous, assaulting, crevassing paint limning bodies torqued by forces inside and outside of them. Marlena Doktorczyk-Donohue: Obit for Two: A Reflection on Dying, Culture, Lucien Freud and Amy Winehouse
  • This research, at the interface between biogeochemistry and community ecology, is conducted in continental aquatic ecosystems and marine ecosystems alike, thereby bridging limnology and oceanography. Contributor: Carlos M. Duarte
  • The Guardian states: "Some scientists say that the ever-expanding volumes of carbon dioxide and methane in Lake Kivu, coupled with the nearby volcanic activity, make a limnic eruption "MAIN" via Steve in Google Reader
  • One such androdioecious branchiopod is the clam shrimp Eulimnadia texana.
  • Regard the Lemna minor L and Rana limnocharis as the target, researched the toxicity of the Clomazone, and studied the hydrolysis dynamics of Clomazone and its factor.
  • The curves of her body are limned in the half-dark by light reflected from the room's reddish carpet.
  • Although the Sun has used the word limn twice before in headlines (and 47 times, total, in the paper's history), those previous uses didn't occasion much, if any, comment. Boston Globe -- Ideas section
  • No more can Mr. George Sandys, who came to Virginia in the train of Governor Wyat, in 1621, and completed his excellent metrical translation of Ovid on the banks of the James, in the midst of the Indian massacre of 1622, "limned" as he writes "by that imperfect light which was snatched from the hours of night and repose, having wars and tumults to bring it to light instead of the muses. Initial Studies in American Letters
  • He was holding the reigns of a small white horse whose long tail and mane shone as though limned with sunlight, even in the dim light allowed by the tall, narrow stone loopholes that faced south above the river.
  • This is the website for The Cooperative Institute for Limnology and Ecosystems Research, University of Michigan.
  • The near-surface open water surrounded by the littoral zone is the limnetic zone. Freshwater biomes
  • Both ponds are dystrophic, surrounded by extensive mats of Sphagnum, and stratified in summer with anoxic hypolimnia.
  • The sheer sonic fragility of "limn" makes it easy to read as suggesting a fragile or suggestive depiction. Languagehat.com: THE PERILS OF A FANCY VOCABULARY.
  • You should see what they can do with mixed disciplines -- scholia like histochemistry, immunodynamics, biophysics, terataxonomy, osmotic genetics, electrolimnology, and half a hundred more. A Case Of Conscience

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