Sunshine in a sentence as a noun

"Hasn't screwed you yet" is starting to look a little too weak once considered in the sunshine.

Theres a tendency to think that working from home is all sunshine and rainbows and working in your PJs.

Being an early adopter is rarely sunshine and rainbows.

It looked like so much fun to be out picking chile peppers in the sunshine instead of sitting in front of a screen in my dark office.

Its all sunshine and roses until "the meeting" in which Carmack says "I've started this awesome feature that I feel defines the future of the product and..." a hand goes up and a suit says "that really doesn't fit with 'our vision' for where we want Oculus to go".

It is geographically diverse we enjoy great sunshine and great skiing in relatively close proximity.

Fifth, generally, there\nare on average 1,450 sunshine hours per year at maximum in the Czech Republic and in\nGermany, on localities where measurements were done.

That said, its not all sunshine and lollipops - there are good reasons its considered "low-tech" - only one device can "talk" at a time, labelling is appalling, all protocols are proprietary.

People aren't that far removed from their hunter-gatherer days, and now we sit all day surrounded by walls, without sunshine, eating really poor diets -- maybe an inability to focus and concentrate all day is just our bodys' way of objecting to that rapid change.

Sunshine definitions

noun

the rays of the sun; "the shingles were weathered by the sun and wind"

See also: sunlight

noun

moderate weather; suitable for outdoor activities

See also: temperateness

noun

the quality of being cheerful and dispelling gloom; "flowers added a note of cheerfulness to the drab room"

See also: cheerfulness cheer sunniness