All 4 Uses of
twilight
in
Prince Caspian: The Return to Narnia
- It was a cold and cheerless waking for them all next morning, with a grey twilight in the wood (for the sun had not yet risen) and everything damp and dirty.
Chpt 9 *twilight = time between daylight and darkness (in this case, just before the sunrise, but in other instances it could be just after sunset)
- The tunnels inside were a perfect maze till you got to know them, and they were lined and roofed with smooth stones, and on the stones, peering in the twilight, Caspian saw strange characters and snaky patterns, and pictures in which the form of a Lion was repeated again and again.†
Chpt 7
- Twilight was coming on as they rowed slowly up the windings of Glasswater Creek — a twilight which deepened as the banks drew closer together and the overhanging trees began almost to meet overhead.†
Chpt 9
- Twilight was coming on as they rowed slowly up the windings of Glasswater Creek — a twilight which deepened as the banks drew closer together and the overhanging trees began almost to meet overhead.†
Chpt 9
Definitions:
-
(1)
(twilight as in: pink clouds in a twilight sky) the time of day between daylight and darkness (just after sunset or just before sunrise); or the light from the sky at that time
-
(2)
(twilight as in: the twilight of her career) a condition of decline following successes
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(3)
(meaning too rare to warrant focus) Much more rarely, twilight can refer to