0 the brightness that comes from the sun, fire, etc. and from electrical devices, and that allows things to be seen: --
Some signals use technologies that detect when cars are stopped at the light.
As the lights turned green, cyclists would be the first away, with cars and buses following on behind.
She stopped at the lights and saw him on the other side of the road.
It's a north-facing room so it doesn't get much light (= brightness from the sun).
fluorescent/ultraviolet light
a bright light
1 something that will produce a flame and cause burning, such as a match or a cigarette lighter: --
3 not weighing a lot: --
The pragmatic themes of reevaluation and revision in light of new information are evident in this method.
Roughly speaking, life nudges the universe so as to allow light to circumnavigate the universe first in one direction, and then another.
In light of this, it would seem appropriate to try another analytical approach that could be appropriate for strongly nonlinear systems.
One major cross-linguistic generalisation that is supported by these data concerns syllable weight : many stress systems distinguish between light and heavy syllables.
Luminance gradients are usually thought to provide cues about the interactions of light and surfaces that model the volume of the resulting object.
However, many problems have remained unsolved, and many supposed facts need to be revised in the light of recent research.
The child was then told that the lights in the room would be turned off.
On a technical note, the maps are so blurred as to be sometimes unreadable and the print quality is light and indistinct on some pages.