: ux|en|Mondays child is fair of face.
: ux|en|There was once a knight who wooed a fair young maid.
: ux|en|ones fair name
: ux|en|After scratching out and replacing various words in the manuscript, he scribed a fair copy to send to the publisher.
*: a fair white linen cloth
: ux|en|She had fair hair and blue eyes.
*: the northern people large and fair-complexioned
*: This new-comer was a man who in any company would have seemed striking. In complexion fair, and with blue or gray eyes, he was tall as any Viking, as broad in the shoulder.
: ux|en|He must be given a fair trial.
*: “[…] it is not fair of you to bring against mankind double weapons ! Dangerous enough you are as woman alone, without bringing to your aid those gifts of mind suited to problems which men have been accustomed to arrogate to themselves.”
: ux|en|The patient was in a fair condition after some treatment.
: ux|en|a fair sky; a fair day
*: You wish fair winds may waft him over.
: ux|en|a fair mark; in fair sight; a fair view
*: The caliphs obtained a mighty empire, which was in a fair way to have enlarged.
: When will we learn to distinguish between the fair and the foul?
*: Love and Hymen, hand in hand,
*: Come, restore the nuptial band!
*: And sincere delights prepare
*: To crown the hero and the fair.
*: In enjoying, therefore, such place of rendezvous, the British fair ought to esteem themselves more happy than any of their foreign sisters ...
*: If single, probably his plighted Fair / Has in his absence wedded some rich miser [...].
: rfquotek|Shakespeare
*: I have found out a gift for my fair.
*: Now fair befall thee!
*: Fairing the foul.
: ux|en|I have pale yellow wallpaper.
: ux|en|She had pale skin because she didnt get much sunlight.
*: “Heavens!” exclaimed Nina, “the blue-stocking and the fogy!—and yours are pale blue, Eileen!—you’re about as self-conscious as Drina—slumping there with your hair tumbling à la Mérode! Oh, its very picturesque, of course, but a straight spine and good grooming is better.nb...”
: ux|en|His face turned pale after hearing about his mothers death.
: He is but a pale shadow of his former self.
*: Apt to pale at a trodden worm.
: 2006 [http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/14/technology/14google.html?hp&ex=1158292800&en=0715e3c0dff465e2&ei=5094&partner=homepage New York Times] Its financing pales next to the tens of billions that the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation will have at its disposal, ...
*: The matter of whether the world needs a fourth Ice Age movie pales beside the question of why there were three before it, but Continental Drift feels less like an extension of a theatrical franchise than an episode of a middling TV cartoon, lolling around on territory that’s already been settled.
*: The glowworm shows the matin to be near, / And gins to pale his uneffectual fire.
: rfquotek|Shakespeare
*: Deer creep through when a pale tumbles down.
*: Fourthly, they shall not vpon any occasion whatsoeuer breake downe any of our pales, or come into any of our Townes or forts by any other waies, issues or ports then ordinary [...].
*: to walk the studious cloisters pale
*: Men so situated, beyond the pale of the honor and the law, are not to be trusted.
*: All things considered, we advise the male reader to keep his desires in check till he is at least twenty-five, and the female not to enter the pale of wedlock until she has attained the age of twenty.
*: He knows the fortifications – crumbling – and beyond the city walls the lands of the Pale, its woods, villages and marshes, its sluices, dykes and canals.
*: A low-lying, marshy enclave stretching eighteen miles along the coast and pushing some eight to ten miles inland, the Pale of Calais nestled between French Picardy to the west and, to the east, the imperial-dominated territories of Flanders.
: rfquotek|Simmonds
: rfquotek|Spencer
: [Your isle, which stands] ribbed and paled in / With rocks unscalable and roaring waters. — Shakespeare.
: color panel|F8E8A7
: blond hair
: blonde ale; blonde beer
*: She has a blond complexion, with brown hair and gray eyes.
:* quote-magazine|year=2011|month=Feb|title=Beauty Confessions|volume=216|issue=2|page=60|magazine=Redbook|passage=If youre going one or two shades lighter, dont even touch your brows. But if youre making a big change, soften them by tinting them with home haircolor: a lighter shade of brown for blonder shades, a golden shade if youre dyeing your hair red.
: ux|en|As you can see, this spacious dining-room gets a lot of light in the mornings.
: ux|en|Put that light out!
: ux|en|Can you throw any light on this problem?
*: He shall never know / That I had any light of this from thee.
*: Now these notions are twofold, actions or habits […], which are durable lights and notions, which we may use when we will.
: ux|en|Picasso was one of the leading lights of the cubist movement.
*: Joan of Arc, a light of ancient France
: ux|en|Im really seeing you in a different light today.
: ux|en|Magoons governorship in Cuba was viewed in a negative light by many Cuban historians for years thereafter.
*: Frequent consideration of a thing ... shows it in its several lights and various ways of appearance.
: ux|en|Hey, buddy, you got a light?
: a Bengal light
: ux|en|This facade has eight south-facing lights.
: ux|en|The average length of a light on a 15×15 grid is 7 or 8.
*: The duke yet would have dark deeds darkly answered; he would never bring them to light.
*: My strength faileth me; as for the light of my eyes, it also is gone from me.
*: He seemed to find his way without his eyes; / For out odoor he went without their helps, / And, to the last, bended their light on me.
: ux|en|To get to our house, turn right at the third light.
: We lit the fire to get some heat.
: She lit her last match.
*: if a thousand candles be all lighted from one
*: Absence might cure it, or a second mistress / Light up another flame, and put out this.
: I used my torch to light the way home through the woods in the night.
*: One hundred years ago, to have lit this theatre as brilliantly as it is now lighted would have cost, I suppose, fifty pounds.
*: The Sun has set, and Vesper, to supply / His absent beams, has lighted up the sky.
: This soggy match will not light.
*: His bishops lead him forth, and light him on.
: ux|en|The room is light when the Sun shines through the window.
: ux|en|She had light skin.
: ux|en|I like my coffee light.
: My bag was much lighter once I had dropped off the books.
*: These weights did not exert their natural gravity ... insomuch that I could not guess which was light or heavy whilst I held them in my hand.
: We took a light aircraft down to the city.
: This artist clearly had a light, flowing touch.
: light duties around the house
*: Light sufferings give us leisure to complain.
: This light beer still gets you drunk if you have enough of it.
: I made some light comment, and we moved on.
*: Long after lay he musing at her mood, / Much grieud to thinke that gentle Dame so light, / For whose defence he was to shed his blood.
*: So do not you; for you are a light girl.
*: A light wife doth make a heavy husband.
: light troops; a troop of light horse
*: Unmarried men are best friends, best masters ... but not always best subjects, for they are light to run away.
: a light, vain person; a light mind
*: There is no greater argument of a light and inconsiderate person than profanely to scoff at religion.
*: Seneca can not be too heavy, nor Plautus too light.
*: specimens of New England humour laboriously light and lamentably mirthful
*: Are his wits safe? Is he not light of brain?
: light coin
: light sleep, light anesthesia
: I prefer to travel light.
*: His mailèd habergeon she did undight, / And from his head his heavy burgonet did light.
: I lit upon a rare book in a second-hand booksellers.
: She fell out of the window but luckily lit on her feet.
*: Some kinds of ducks in lighting strike the water with their tails first, and skitter along the surface for a few feet before settling down.
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