| dusk | 1. Imperfect obscurity; a middle degree between light and darkness; twilight; as, the dusk of the evening. 2. A darkish colour. "Whose duck set off the whiteness of the skin." (Dryden) Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
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| dusky | 1. Partially dark or obscure; not luminous; dusk; as, a dusky valley. "Through dusky lane and wrangling mart." (Keble) 2. Tending to blackness in colour; partially black; dark-coloured; not bright; as, a dusky brown. "When Jove in dusky clouds involves the sky." (Dryden) "The figure of that first ancestor invested by family tradition with a dim and dusky grandeur." (Hawthorne) 3. Gloomy; sad; melancholy. "This dusky scene of horror, this melancholy prospect." (Bentley) 4. Intellectually clouded. "Though dusky wits dare scorn astrology." (Sir P. Sidney) Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
| dusk | a state of diffused or dim illumination |
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| dusk | the time of day immediately following sunset |
| dusk | a swarthy complexion |
| dusk | the state of being poorly illuminated |
| dusk | naturally having skin of a dark color |
| dusk | lighted by or as if by twilight |
| dusk | common North American salamander mottled with dull brown or grayish-black |
| dusk | relatively slender blue-gray shark |
| dusk | host to Lyme disease tick (Ixodes pacificus) in northern California |
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