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Discover LudwigThe phrase "ambiguous light" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe light that is unclear, indistinct, or open to multiple interpretations, often in a metaphorical or artistic context.
Example: "The painting was bathed in an ambiguous light, leaving viewers to ponder its true meaning."
Alternatives: "unclear illumination" or "indistinct light".
Exact(6)
Abroad, Mrs Thatcher, as she was always known, was seen in a far less ambiguous light.
This pastel, done more than a decade later, lingers in the similarly ambiguous light of late afternoon.
Approximately two thirds of our sample shows ambiguous light curves from which no period estimate can be obtained.
"The result is that you end up with a completely ambiguous light source that by chance or not is such that your visual system doesn't know what the hell to make of it," said Conway.
A mother and son (included in the exhibition but not the catalog) sit on a couch at a Hawaii resort, with the ambiguous light of an atrium, neither inside nor outside, reflecting their complex familiarity.
Indeed, the film casts a very sympathetic eye on Oscar, shedding a slightly more ambiguous light on the cops who detained and killed him.
Similar(54)
It was a defeat for the plaintiff in that case, but the high court flashed "an ambiguous green light" to other lawsuits by suggesting the ATC could be used to allege torts that didn't exist when it was written in 1789.
The present results suggest that looming and receding sounds alter the judgements of the in-depth orientation of depth-ambiguous point-light walkers.
The goal of the present study was to test whether the perceived in-depth orientation of depth-ambiguous point-light walkers (plws) is affected by the presentation of looming or receding sounds synchronized with the footsteps.
In Experiment 1, we examined whether auditory information that was congruent either with an approaching or with a receding walker would influence the in-depth interpretation of a depth-ambiguous point-light walker (plw).
After all this frustration you may well decide to abandon publishing it altogether, leaving the results in what scientists call the file drawer: a great attic in the sky for results that were too complex or ambiguous to see light of day.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com