dusk
71dusk falls — darkness/night/dusk/falls phrase it becomes dark in the evening Thesaurus: coming of night and daysynonym times of the dayhyponym Main entry …
72dusk — I. adjective Etymology: Middle English dosk, alteration of Old English dox; akin to Latin fuscus dark brown, Old English dunn dun, dūst dust Date: 13th century dusky II. verb Date: 13th century intransitive verb to become dark …
73dusk — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. twilight, gloaming; semi darkness, gloom, half light, shadow; swarthiness. See dimness, darkness. II (Roget s IV) n. Syn. twilight, nightfall, gloom; see night 1 , sunset . III (Roget s 3… …
74dusk — dÊŒsk n. state between light and darkness, twilight, nightfall …
75dusk — noun the darker stage of twilight. verb literary grow dark. Origin OE dox dark, swarthy and doxian darken in colour , of Gmc origin; cf. dun1 …
76dusk — n. 1. Twilight, approach of night or darkness, edge of darkness, nightfall. 2. Dark color, approach to blackness, duskiness …
77dusk — n 1. twilight, crepuscule, Literary. gloaming; late afternoon, evening, eventide, evenfall, eve, Archaic. even, Archaic. evensong, sundown, sunset, moonrise, day s end, edge of night, nightfall. 2. shade, shadiness, shadow, shadowiness, dimness,… …
78dusk — noun Syn: twilight, nightfall, sunset, sundown, evening, close of day, semi darkness, gloom; literary gloaming Ant: dawn …
79dusk — [dʌsk] noun [U] the period of time at the end of the day just before it gets dark …
80duskæ̅n — s. duskēn; …