
Verb The lessons didn’t stop there as Davis once again shadowed McQ on set, as well as in the editing room, alongside Cruise and editor Eddie Hamilton. Keith Nelson, Men's Health, 27 July 2023 Greg Beacham, Chicago Tribune, 27 July 2023 While World War II was a looming shadow over everything in Oppenheimer, in Dunkirk, Nolan immerses you deep into the dark past of the deadliest war in modern history. Peter Su, Rolling Stone, 28 July 2023 Bronny James has built a promising basketball career for himself in his father’s considerable shadow. Rex Nelson, Arkansas Online, 30 July 2023 From Street to Dispensary As the legalization movement gained traction, pre-rolls made their way from the shadows of street corners to legal dispensaries. Terri Robertson, Country Living, 31 July 2023 To the south, the old manufacturing city of Fort Smith has lived in that shadow. Jordan Gale Jan Hoffman, New York Times, 31 July 2023 The result is a lunar eclipse, also called a blood moon for the reddish shadow the Earth casts on the moon. 2023 Within months of the measure taking effect in February 2021, open-air drug use, long in the shadows, burst into full view, with people sitting in circles in parks or leaning against street signs, smoking fentanyl crushed on tinfoil. Samantha Latson, Washington Post, 1 Aug. 2023 The display consists of two areas, a shadow and sunny side. Alex Shephard, The New Republic, 3 Aug. Noun This is a golden opportunity to do the standard shadow primary work of defining yourself and defining your opponent, creating some clear terms by which voters can easily assay the differences between your campaign and Trump’s.
