-noun 1. the comparative darkness caused by the interception or screening of rays of light from an object, place, or area. 2. a place or an area of comparative darkness, as one sheltered from the sun. 3. window shade. 4. a lampshade. 5. shades, a. darkness gathering at the close of day: Shades of night are falling. b. Slang. sunglasses. c. a reminder of something: shades of the Inquisition. 6. Usually, shades. a secluded or obscure place: He was living in the shades. 7. comparative obscurity. 8. a specter or ghost. 9. Greek and Roman Religion. one of the spirits of the dead inhabiting Hades. 10. a shadow. 11. the degree of darkness of a color, determined by the quantity of black or by the lack of illumination. 12. comparative darkness, as the effect of shadow or dark and light, in pictorial representation; the dark part, or a dark part, of a picture or drawing. 13. a slight variation or degree: a shade of difference. 14. a little bit; touch, esp. of something that may change the color of or lighten or darken something else: coffee with a shade of cream. 15. anything used for protection against excessive light, heat, etc. 16. (in architectural shades and shadows) a shadow upon those parts of a solid that are tangent to or turned away from the parallel rays from the theoretical light source. Compare shadow (def. 11). 17. the shades, Hades, as the abode of the spirits of the dead. -verb (used with object) 18. to produce shade in or on. 19. to obscure, dim, or darken. 20. to screen or hide from view. 21. to protect (something) from light, heat, etc., by or as by a screen: to shade the eyes from a bright light. 22. to cover or screen (a candle, light, etc.): to shade a light to protect the eyes. 23. Fine Arts. a. to introduce degrees of darkness into (a drawing or painting) in order to render light and shadow or give the effect of color. b. to render the values of light and dark in (a drawn figure, object, etc.), esp. in order to create the illusion of three-dimensionality. 24. to change by imperceptible degrees into something else. 25. to reduce (the price) by way of a concession. -verb (used without object) 26. to pass or change by slight graduations, as one color, quality, or thing into another. -Verb phrase 27. Agriculture. shade up, to take shelter (as livestock) from the sun. -Idiom 28. cast or put someone in or into the shade, to make another person's efforts seem insignificant by comparison; surpass: Her playing puts mine in the shade. ---- [Origin: bef. 900; 1960-65 for def. 28; (n.) ME s(c)hade, OE sceadu (see shadow); c. G Schatten, Goth skadus, Gk skótos; (v.) ME schaden, deriv. of the n.]
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Shade is a noun (the shade) and a verb (to shade).
alliteration for shade?
The word shade is a noun, a singular, common noun; such as a window shade or lamp shade. The word shade is also a verb and an adjective; for example: Noun: We found a perfect picnic spot in the shade. Noun: What shade of lip gloss is your favorite? Verb: Here's the baby's bonnet, it will shade his eyes. Adjective: We planted a row of shade trees along the patio.
a shade of green, i think like a bright, light shade a shade of green, i think like a bright, light shade a shade of green, i think like a bright, light shade
Shade, as in "What shade of red is it?".
"There is no lightest shade of white because white is a shade."
SHADE
A Shade.
Examples of collective nouns for shade trees a stand of shade trees or a grove of shade trees.
Crystal Shade's birth name is Crystal Shade.
Claude Shade has written: 'Claude Shade photographs'
shade is no one it is sunny day