Dark in a sentence as a noun

To be honest, Crossfit has quite a few dark secrets.

Give your customers a window on their apps going dark, if appropriate.

I'm sure a lot of thought went into how this would look or change when it was laid over light, dark, or patterned photos.

Add to this the "social" layer being foisted on users and it's really looking like dark days ahead for gaming.

If you have any money left, spend that cash on those awful, dark-alley fake review and promotion services.

On that note, though today isn't the best day for me to cheer up others, I'm available to chat for any founder going through dark days.

The dark theme on pages, for example, looks very clean with Apple and Adobe as featured, but I imagine will look pretty dreary to stare at all day.

Dark in a sentence as an adjective

These companies would prefer you rot in the dark, than to lose one bit of profit.- Three, if one of these devices is not 100% perfect, it gets shot down and banned from the market.

That is a dark smear on Broder -- at least if Broder was planning to be a scientific journalist -- but also a dark smear on Tesla's customer support.

We're not living in some sort of space technology dark ages here, where we've forgotten all of the fundamentals of the 1960s 'classical enlightenment'.

> If free citizens of free countries can't live in freedom because of fear of terrorists, the terrorists have already wonAs a dark-skinned man who oftentimes sports a beard, I'm treated like a terrorist every single time I walk through security.

When it comes to the bad things groups of people, such as governments, do to individuals, whether it's killing, torture, imprisonment with or without trial, surveillance or any other of the misdeeds that seems to have returned from the dark ages we deserve the same protection as American citizens.

But sometimes one is dominant, and if the gray beast gets its teeth all the way into you, it takes away not just positive feelings but everything until you're just a walking shell so empty you can't even fully comprehend what you've lost.> The converse, when the black beast has you, can be much like you describe - you can still feel a kind of dreadful, frenzied joy in short moments as you cling desperately to the edge of the sucking dark hole in yourself, trying to ignore the beast's whispers that any pleasure is a lie that will just make the coming pain more stark and inescapable and utterly deserved.> They're liars, but they're good at it.

Dark definitions

noun

absence of light or illumination

See also: darkness

noun

absence of moral or spiritual values; "the powers of darkness"

See also: iniquity wickedness darkness

noun

an unilluminated area; "he moved off into the darkness"

See also: darkness shadow

noun

the time after sunset and before sunrise while it is dark outside

See also: night nighttime

noun

an unenlightened state; "he was in the dark concerning their intentions"; "his lectures dispelled the darkness"

See also: darkness

adjective

devoid of or deficient in light or brightness; shadowed or black; "sitting in a dark corner"; "a dark day"; "dark shadows"; "dark as the inside of a black cat"

adjective

(used of color) having a dark hue; "dark green"; "dark glasses"; "dark colors like wine red or navy blue"

adjective

brunet (used of hair or skin or eyes); "dark eyes"

adjective

stemming from evil characteristics or forces; wicked or dishonorable; "black deeds"; "a black lie"; "his black heart has concocted yet another black deed"; "Darth Vader of the dark side"; "a dark purpose"; "dark undercurrents of ethnic hostility"; "the scheme of some sinister intelligence bent on punishing him"-Thomas Hardy

See also: black sinister

adjective

secret; "keep it dark"

adjective

showing a brooding ill humor; "a dark scowl"; "the proverbially dour New England Puritan"; "a glum, hopeless shrug"; "he sat in moody silence"; "a morose and unsociable manner"; "a saturnine, almost misanthropic young genius"- Bruce Bliven; "a sour temper"; "a sullen crowd"

See also: dour glowering glum moody morose saturnine sour sullen

adjective

lacking enlightenment or knowledge or culture; "this benighted country"; "benighted ages of barbarism and superstition"; "the dark ages"; "a dark age in the history of education"

See also: benighted

adjective

marked by difficulty of style or expression; "much that was dark is now quite clear to me"; "those who do not appreciate Kafka's work say his style is obscure"

See also: obscure

adjective

causing dejection; "a blue day"; "the dark days of the war"; "a week of rainy depressing weather"; "a disconsolate winter landscape"; "the first dismal dispiriting days of November"; "a dark gloomy day"; "grim rainy weather"

adjective

having skin rich in melanin pigments; "National Association for the Advancement of Colored People"; "dark-skinned peoples"

See also: colored coloured dark-skinned non-white

adjective

not giving performances; closed; "the theater is dark on Mondays"