Shine in a sentence as a noun

But if you tame me, it will be as if the sun came to shine on my life.

Instead, you could make it a goal to write three pieces and polish them to a mirror shine.

The tide may be turning and Apple losing a bit of its shine, at least in my circles.

This let's great dealers shine and helps them keep their margins in a highly competitive market.

I'm torn between liking stories that shine a skeptical light on the bitcoin fad and being appalled at how much coverage bitcoin gets on HN.

Even if the amendment process falls short, it can shine a spotlight of the super-PAC phenomenon and help apply pressure for change.

Shine in a sentence as a verb

Options really shine when they wind up on a level playing field with the preferred stock and they tend to dim commensurately to the extent they do not.

Since MemSQL implements group commit on high parallel load throuput picks up. Sure, writing your own very specific benchmark you can show us writing poorly, but we've never worked with a customer that's needed single threaded, synchronous writes to shine.

- Trying is encouraged - changes produce instaneous results - We can shine some light on related bits of code Things like this were happening in Smalltalk environments since the 80's. The first and the last points above were satisfied by lightning fast "senders" and "implementers" searches.

If you're above it, you have independent credibility and you can change projects and as long as you're not a total flake about it, you get enough opportunities that you can find a place where you shine.

Seriously: you think I should spend six months while Cydia is losing money and there are no jailbreaks available--and there may never be a jailbreak available again--sitting around figuring out how to make a payment system scale infinitely so that during a small multi-hour long window it can shine?Even in jailbreak-land, that is not the most important thing to be doing; one of my big time sinks this last half year was figuring out how to better deal with credit card fraud, for example.

Shine definitions

noun

the quality of being bright and sending out rays of light

See also: radiance radiancy effulgence refulgence refulgency

verb

be bright by reflecting or casting light; "Drive carefully--the wet road reflects"

See also: reflect

verb

emit light; be bright, as of the sun or a light; "The sun shone bright that day"; "The fire beamed on their faces"

See also: beam

verb

be shiny, as if wet; "His eyes were glistening"

See also: glitter glisten glint gleam

verb

be distinguished or eminent; "His talent shines"

verb

be clear and obvious; "A shining example"

verb

have a complexion with a strong bright color, such as red or pink; "Her face glowed when she came out of the sauna"

See also: glow beam radiate

verb

throw or flash the light of (a lamp); "Shine the light on that window, please"

verb

touch or seem as if touching visually or audibly; "Light fell on her face"; "The sun shone on the fields"; "The light struck the golden necklace"; "A strange sound struck my ears"

See also: fall strike

verb

experience a feeling of well-being or happiness, as from good health or an intense emotion; "She was beaming with joy"; "Her face radiated with happiness"

See also: glow beam radiate

verb

make (a surface) shine; "shine the silver, please"; "polish my shoes"

See also: polish smooth smoothen