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How To Use Ray of light In A Sentence

  • _multiplicate refraction_, caused by the unequal _density_ of the constituent parts of the _medium_, whereby the motion, action or progress of the Ray of light is hindred from proceeding in a streight line, and Micrographia Some Physiological Descriptions of Minute Bodies Made by Magnifying Glasses with Observations and Inquiries Thereupon
  • Mirrors, spherical or otherwise, operate on the principle that the angle of reflection of a ray of light equals the angle at which it strikes the mirror's surface.
  • If, however, a bundle of rays of light traverses a medium in which extremely fine dust is present, the ray of light will scatter to the sides and the path of the ray through the medium will be discernible from the side. Nobel Prize in Physics 1930 - Presentation Speech
  • This single observation, although restricted in application, was the only ray of light in the problem of tissue and organ replacement until Gibson and Medawar demonstrated that a second allograft from the same donor was rejected more rapidly than the first (9). Joseph E. Murray - Nobel Lecture
  • The one small ray of light shining through the dark hours was that there were still no new victims. THE LAST OF THE GENTLEMEN ADVENTURERS: Coming of Age in the Arctic
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  • As the rays of light pass through an object flatwise, like the blade of a knife through the leaves of a book, and may be admitted through another of like character in the plane of the first, so a ray of light can penetrate with deflection through air and water. Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science Volume 11, No. 23, February, 1873
  • Well actually, none in Westeros would be able to match him even if you remove balefire as an option, which isn't fire in any sense at all by the way (Balefire is a ray of light which removes things from existence before they were eliminated). al'Thor is something of a demigod and would simply tear dragons from the skies, set Others ablaze and roast knights in their armours. Jaime's Challenge
  • Her futile attempt to erase Patti LuPone's "Don't Cry for Me, Argentina" from collective memory cleared the way for her second great period, emblematized by 1998's Ray of Light and last year's Music. Madonna: Zero to 90's
  • His emblem is a ray of light. COLLINS DICTIONARY OF SAINTS
  • Descend a moment, the corner of sword takes floor put out to cut of technical competence ray of light, tap Feng Weng a meantime the Weng makes to ring at the huge pate of head.
  • The one small ray of light shining through the dark hours was that there were still no new victims. THE LAST OF THE GENTLEMEN ADVENTURERS: Coming of Age in the Arctic
  • Even in the dreary weather, a small ray of light cascaded down, enlightening the sparkle of the gold, which Elsa wore.
  • A youngster with a bit of swagger is a real ray of light. Times, Sunday Times
  • I shrieked and jumped back, as he, laughing with amusement, murmured another set of words and a different ray of light extinguished the fire.
  • The club is a ray of light for them. Times, Sunday Times
  • Something happened then, it was as if a brilliant ray of light shone down upon him.
  • Then the lasers are floated in a mini-lake of ethanol (which accounts for the word "fluidics" in the name) and moved into position by a patterned array of light from a computer-controlled projector, which they refer to as optoelectronic tweezers (OET). Scientific Blogging
  • A spectrum is formed by a ray of light passing through a prism.
  • Overhead the sun shone brightly, illuminating the garden with a brilliant ray of light.
  • Each time a ray of light passes through a lens it is slightly weakened.
  • The one thing that fits those specifications is a black hole, an object so massive and hence so gravitationally powerful that not even the ghostliest ray of light can escape its clench. Shedding Light On A Black Hole
  • A youngster with a bit of swagger is a real ray of light. Times, Sunday Times
  • They looked like a ray of light in that dismal room.
  • Zahariev works at a gas station and participation in the contest brought him a ray of light from his normally gray and monotonous routine.
  • Britain's automotive sector has been the one ray of light in the recovery with bumper exports. The Sun
  • She was such a ray of light. Times, Sunday Times
  • How were things going, I asked him, putting on a show of cheerfulness, hoping that he was seeing some ray of light in the present darkness?
  • the ray of light revealed his cautious opening of the door
  • The wavelength, or the number of oscillations per second, in the light thus diffused is here the same as in the original ray of light. Nobel Prize in Physics 1930 - Presentation Speech
  • The club is a ray of light for them. Times, Sunday Times
  • A spectrum is formed by a ray of light passing through a prism.
  • There is a bewildering array of light fittings costing from a few pounds each to a few hundred pounds. SciFi, Fantasy & Horror Collectibles - Part 1223
  • How amatory God contingency be to have bestowed this ray of light in to his miserable life. Archive 2009-11-01
  • Tyndall had shown that in the moving particles of fine dust discovered by a ray of light in a dark room the germs of low forms of life, which would cause putrefaction, were ever present, and ready to spring into life when a favorable "nidus" for the development of the organism was provided. Scientific American Supplement, No. 358, November 11, 1882
  • Here, you see, is our ray of light: we have first to make it what we call polarized; but about that you need not trouble yourselves; it is only to make our illustration more clear. The Forces of Matter, Delivered before a Juvenile Auditory at the Royal Institution of Great Britain during the Christmas Holidays of 1859-60
  • Thanks to modern technology, we have a vast array of lighting choices open to us which may make the project seem confusing.
  • The pallid ray of light illumed the car interior awash in a murky tide. Sonnet of the Sphinx
  • A youngster with a bit of swagger is a real ray of light. Times, Sunday Times
  • A servant stood nearby holding a tray of light snacks and a teapot ready to be poured.
  • A spectrum is formed by a ray of light passing through a prism.
  • His eyes tried desperately to adjust to the light, and soon found a ray of light directly underneath his eyes.
  • A spectrum is formed by a ray of light passing through a prism.
  • Take one unlighted candle away to give to someone who needs a ray of light.
  • Well actually, none in Westeros would be able to match him even if you remove balefire as an option, which isn't fire in any sense at all by the way (Balefire is a ray of light which removes things from existence before they were eliminated). al'Thor is something of a demigod and would simply tear dragons from the skies, set Others ablaze and roast knights in their armours. Jaime's Challenge
  • Giuseppe Cacace/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images RAY OF LIGHT: A view of the 'Grave' part of the grottoes of Castellana, one of the most important natural underground caves in Europe, in Apulia, Italy. Photos of the Day: Aug. 5
  • A youngster with a bit of swagger is a real ray of light. Times, Sunday Times
  • His emblem is a ray of light. COLLINS DICTIONARY OF SAINTS
  • Overheard the sun shone brightly, illuminating the garden with a brilliant ray of light.
  • Mirrors, spherical or otherwise, operate on the principle that the angle of reflection of a ray of light equals the angle at which it strikes the mirror's surface.
  • A ray of light pierced the darkness.
  • She was such a ray of light. Times, Sunday Times

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