Use "illumine" in a sentence
illumine example sentences
illumine
1. Illumine in the larger scheme of things
2. so does the Light of the One illumine the darkness of our hearts
3. The light from the radium gem did not illumine it as it would have illumined an ordinary creature
4. It burst suddenly, showering the darkness with white sparks that did not illumine the shadows
5. that the truth he is about to illumine has also been known to and celeb-
6. The Ved only illumine the three properties of nature; they know noth-
7. are developed by initiation into yog, others illumine the glories that are
8. received a sliver of the light that will illumine your world again, but in the meantime your
9. The church like a huge boudoir spread around her; the arches bent down to gather in the shade the confession of her love; the windows shone resplendent to illumine her face, and the censers would burn that she might appear like an angel amid the fumes of the sweet-smelling odours
10. The church like a huge boudoir spread around her; the arches bent down to gather in the shade the confession of her love; the windows shone resplendent to illumine her face, and the
11. If he is an old, familiar artist, the question is no longer, "Who are you?" but, "Well, what new thing can you tell me? From what new side will you now illumine my life for me?" And so an author who has no definite, clear, new view of the world, and still more so the one who does not consider this to be necessary, cannot give an artistic production
12. He might assert as lofty a spirit, as unyielding an adherence to the deliberate convictions of his own understanding, as Lord Chatham himself; who, because he set his face against corruption, and had the art of making every coward scoundrel in the nation his foe—concentrating upon himself the "rays of royal indignation, which might illumine but could not consume him;" who, because with intuitive glance he penetrated, resolved and combined every interest of his country, and each design of her enemies, and reached his object "by the flashes of his mind, which, like those of his eye, might be felt but could not be followed," was by the plodding, purblind, groping politicians of the day, attempted to be held up as an empty declaimer, a theatrical gesticulator