[
US
/ˈɫus/
]
[ UK /lˈuːs/ ]
[ UK /lˈuːs/ ]
NOUN
- United States publisher of magazines (1898-1967)
- United States playwright and public official (1902-1987)
How To Use Luce In A Sentence
- The 'American Empire' of the late 20th century, which Luce more politely referred to as the 'American Century', and of which no presidents since Eisenhower and JFK ever whispered the word 'Empire' while it actually existed, was already body-snatched by the time anyone other than Chomsky and Chalmers Johnson impolitely called it by its real name. Barack Obama: Manchurian Candidate Version 2.0
- There be sixty-and-four flowers-de-luce, and the riddle is to show how I may remove six of these so that there may yet be an even number of the flowers in every row and every column. The Canterbury Puzzles And Other Curious Problems
- In addition, small chondral fragments are radiolucent and not evident on standard radiographs.
- After our eyes adjust, we find the walls to be a gorgeous translucent blue, the surface scalloped into smooth, symmetrical wavelets.
- It would have been dark except for the light coming from the translucent side panels.
- Living on an irrigation property on the banks of the Murray River, Ray's childhood was spent on the farm helping with flood irrigation, fencing, harvesting lucerne, shearing and crutching.
- Chop the half onion thinly and fry under low heat so that it becomes soft and translucent. Times, Sunday Times
- In the 1990s, however, as managerialism began to dominate the university, translucence and opaqueness replaced transparency.
- Males tend to wear armor suits in shiny silver colors that covered their chests and private spots, while females dressed up with silk-like materials covering them from head to toe that were part translucent with a wide variety of tints.
- Hereafter no remittances shall be made for annates or for any other purpose to the court of Rome, the vice legation at Avignon, or to the nunciature at Lucerne.