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deadlight
/ ˈɛˌɪ /
noun
- nautical
- a bull's-eye let into the deck or hull of a vessel to admit light to a cabin
- a shutter of wood or metal for sealing off a porthole or cabin window
- a skylight designed not to be opened
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yvlog History and Origins
Origin of deadlight1
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Example Sentences
Examples have not been reviewed.
How unsettling his performance is: when he’s being jolly in luring Georgie to the sewer, there’s something of the serial killer to him, rather than the immortal creature from the deadlights.
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“That’s what I minded most, about the storm,” she added, “four days shut away down there with the deadlights up.”
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My deadlights was more misty than I like to have 'em.
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To his second officer he had expressed a desire for a typhoon that would roll the deadlights out of his boat, and blow the hyphenated “garden truck” into the Sulu Sea.
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The deadlight of the porthole had been unshipped and the cabin was flooded with dazzling sunlight.
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