0 past simple and past participle of shadow
2 to produce a shadow:
3 to make a person unhappy or to make their life less happy:
Long ago, life on earth was threatened by a gigantic vine that shadowed the sky and which had several giant gourds growing on it.
Only impactors in the roughly shadowed region of size distribution could lead to the emergence of humans.
The diffuse dose experienced by organisms in possible shadowed regions can now also be evaluated.
Since the perturbation is small, the perturbed map has the shadowing property so that the above pseudo-orbit must be shadowed by some g-orbit.
Since the perturbed map has the shadowing property in the chain component, this pseudo-orbit must be shadowed by some g-orbit.
The ars moriendi became an essential task of an everyday life shadowed by mortality.
Speech can be shadowed with latencies as small as 250 milliseconds, with subjects beginning to pronounce each phoneme as soon as it has been perceived.
The narrative of romance and unrequited love is shadowed by a bourgeois narrative of domesticity.