Nadir in a sentence as a noun

Mid-2011 was the nadir of its weakness on that issue.

That implies your legal privileges are at their nadir, by the way.

If that is true then this change would mark the nadir of Google's ability to grow that market.

Your nose increments the count at the nadir, and your Beeminder graph is instantly updated.

It teaches us to not take the present moment too seriously as some kind of apex or nadir.

This has to be near the nadir of my familiarity/revulsion curve.

You're taken through the caverns in a group, and at the nadir the guide turns the lights off so you can hear what it's like in the dark cavern.

If it ever becomes notable, it will be as the nadir of a cycle heading back toward "Simplicity.

As a morbid datapoint, commuting on the 101 got much better at the nadir of the bust, because so many peoples' jobs were lost.

I think the Bush years were a nadir, and I think we're in a long U-shaped valley, but I think the 2020s will be slightly better than the 2010s, which will shape up to be better than the 2000s were.

You'll probably snort at all of this, but reflect upon this when you're in that segue mode between the zenith and the nadir, when you're passing through that goldilocks zone of stability, and you'll know the answer.

Is Vine really a radical new way to communicate, or is it merely the nadir of audiovisual culture, fragmenting the world into six-second shards of nothingness?

Is Vine really a radical new way to communicate, or is it merely the nadir of audiovisual culture, fragmenting the world into six-second shards of nothingness?How about both?

Nadir definitions

noun

an extreme state of adversity; the lowest point of anything

noun

the point below the observer that is directly opposite the zenith on the imaginary sphere against which celestial bodies appear to be projected