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Discover LudwigThe phrase "shades of light" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It means varying degrees or types of light. It can be used to describe the different levels of brightness, color, or intensity of light in a particular setting. Example: The sunset painted the sky with shades of light, ranging from a soft pink to a vibrant orange.
Exact(46)
Behind them, a bank of panels glows with shifting shades of light, suggesting morphing weather patterns.
The cummingtonite-grunerite series occurs in various shades of light brown.
He claims he's able to see different shades of light and dark.
Like its windows, it does nothing but accommodate shades of light and dark.
War's shadow is an infinite one; but within that shadow are infinite shades of light.
The last shades of light were fading into grey, night beginning to veil the park-land.
Similar(13)
For Josh Klein this meant taking a clumsy red-glazed ceramic desk caddy and placing it on an office desk complete with chair and computer, all of which he "glazed" with shades of light-beige (clay-colored) paint.
"Men are wearing shades of lighter purple shirts and darker purple ties," she said.
One particular shade of light yellow is dubbed "baby sun".
"The jersey's different shades, the shorts are a different shade of light blue," the junior forward John Henson said at the Atlantic Coast Conference media day last week.
Colour was not a trivial detail to Hitchcock: the shading of light and dark on a screen was the larger part of cinema.
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