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  1. Oct 14, 2021 · Oct 14, 2021. #3. entangledbank said: There are several possibilities for most of them, but the basic difference is that you shine a torch (flashlight) at a thing when you direct the light in that direction, so you can shine it at anything of almost any size - wall, person, tree, squirrel.

  2. Apr 26, 2016 · May 1, 2016. #5. Thank you very much, Truffula. For what it's worth, I will add another possible origin that I've found on a website: ‘Shine on” is an expression that has been around since the 1950s. It means to ignore, to reject, to disregard, to avoid, skip. Later it also came to mean to disparage someone. It is said to have originated ...

  3. Feb 21, 2016 · Which preposition do we use for the word shine? Shine a light on my face. Shine a light in my face. Shine a light into my face.

  4. Sep 3, 2017 · With 'in', 'into' and 'on' the light is shone directly in/into the face. With 'over' the light is moved over people's faces, let's say from side to side of a group, one by one. The quote below might be from a gospel song, what's called a hymn in a white Christian context, but both mean songs to God.

  5. Feb 1, 2010 · Korea, Korean. Feb 1, 2010. #1. While we are still forecasting reduced year over year revenues for 2010, we are encouraged in that we have recently achieved some significant customer wins across our businesses, and we’ll be shining a light on those in future updates. This is from a company's business update of the first quarter of 2010.

  6. Nov 20, 2018 · Nov 20, 2018. #2. To gleam -> to shine softly; to shine with a brightness subdued by distance or an intervening medium. To shine -> to reflect light clearly and sharply. To glow -> to emit light, usually softly or weakly, from itself. A glow is always cause by some form of energy. Last edited: Nov 20, 2018.

  7. Jul 28, 2022 · But in later years when the students started working with patients in a clinical environment and needed to collaborate with each other in teams, students who demonstrated other-interest traits—like extroversion, openness to helping, and agreeableness to assist classmates— performed at the...

  8. Dec 22, 2008 · No, 'gold will shine' is a statement about the value of gold on the world markets. The value of gold declined significantly over the last several decades, but many people speculate that the value of gold will climb sharply over the next year. I like the literal translation of the proverb. Last edited: Dec 22, 2008.

  9. Oct 11, 2016 · Oct 6, 2016. #7. Not to make a list or anything, but this expression (which I've never heard either) is being used very much like a much more common one: "blowing smoke up your ass." This expression means "kidding you" or "misleading you" or sometimes "conning you," and it sounds as though the "sunshine" version is being used in exactly the ...

  10. Dec 16, 2012 · Jan 30, 2013. #9. "Shine bright" and "shine brightly" are both equally natural. (So are "burn brightly" and "burn bright.") I think this might have more to do with "bright/ly" than with "shine." "Shine brilliantly" is more natural than "shine brilliant," but both are possible. The latter sounds more emphatic and rhetorical.

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