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shading

[ UK /ʃˈe‍ɪdɪŋ/ ]
[ US /ˈʃeɪdɪŋ/ ]
NOUN
  1. graded markings that indicate light or shaded areas in a drawing or painting
  2. a gradation involving small or imperceptible differences between grades

How To Use shading In A Sentence

  • The sun was bright in a sky already shading into a cooler, breezier blue, and the trees surrounding the compound glowed with the first, bright brush strokes of fall.
  • Just as the crooked mass of shiny-leafed buttonbush, and even the swamp dwelling mayapple - its umbrella-like leaves shading sweet yellow fruit - need fire's fertilizing hand, so too does the wildlife.
  • Logwood is not only used for dyeing blacks and greys as the principal colouring matter, but is also used as a shading colour along with cutch, fustic, quercitron, etc., in dyeing olives, browns, etc., and among the recipes given in this section examples of its use in this direction will be found. The Dyeing of Cotton Fabrics A Practical Handbook for the Dyer and Student
  • Effective shading can be provided by trees and other vegetation and exterior or interior shades.
  • Black is self-explanatory but some black Chows have silver shadings in tail or breechings.
  • The shading coefficient is the measure of solar heat gain through the window.
  • And still more, the power of phrasing and shading music with feeling depends equally upon the training of the nerve-centres, upon the co-ordination of the muscular system, upon rapid communication between brain and limbs -- in a word, upon the health of the whole organism; and it is by trying to discover the individual cause of each musical defect, and to find a means of correcting it, that I have gradually built up my method of eurhythmics. The Eurhythmics of Jaques-Dalcroze
  • Some of the shading techniques used were cross-hatching, stippling, spirals and close repetition of continuous lines.
  • Along the path there were fascinating details, composed of the manifold greenery which revels in damp heat, ferns, mosses, confervae, fungi, trailers, shading tiny rills which dropped down into grottoes feathery with the exquisite Trichomanes radicans, or drooped over the rustic path and hung into the river, and overhead the finely incised and almost feathery foliage of several varieties of maple admitted the light only as a green mist. Unbeaten Tracks in Japan
  • Just a teeny bit of shading is required. Times, Sunday Times
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