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46 Sentences With "blots out"

How to use blots out in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "blots out" and check conjugation/comparative form for "blots out". Mastering all the usages of "blots out" from sentence examples published by news publications.

That storm, when it takes flight and blots out the sun, will be new.
First, Mr. Martin blots out the tone of the lips with foundation or concealer.
" A familiar message blots out the screen: " Please Stand By We Are Experiencing Technical Difficulties .
Unfortunately, Korver's defense blots out almost all of his positive impact in that particular matchup.
The next time we see him, his enormous figure all but blots out the sun.
I let myself be overwhelmed by the sound and hope that it blots out any outside thoughts.
They fear that the SpaceX satellites are too bright and could form a "megaconstellation" that blots out the stars.
It's a story about a government that exploits fear of Islamic terrorists to crush dissent, then blots out women's reproductive rights.
It's that brief period of time when the lipstick you're wearing blots out just so and turns into a gorgeous, seamless stain.
But ignoring history's shameful villainesses like Sammie Dean blots out the ways that women have wielded their limited social power to oppress others.
From San Jose to Sacramento, the air is so thick and putrid that it blots out the sky and the sun and the stars.
The glare of urban living all but blots out the cosmic show overhead, denying you the dazzling vision of countless constellations and celestial bodies.
The wood-and-steel frame covering a busy corner of Harlem blots out the sunlight, blocks foot traffic and attracts unsavory crowds and litter.
In composing it from the perspective of a 12-year-old girl, the author underwrites so thoroughly that she mostly blots out her own sun.
Light pollution blots out the night sky for billions of people around the world, but there are still places where the night remains untouched by humans.
Many people have witnessed lunar eclipses, where Earth's shadow dims the Moon, or a partial solar eclipse, where the Moon blots out part of the Sun.
It's really just a wireframe with a cloth covering that blots out your peripheral vision, while still giving you plenty to look at in front of you.
But at 2:41 pm on Monday, August 21, their solar panels will go dark as the shadow of the moon blots out the sun's energy-producing rays.
In most of these small single paintings, such as the fandango pink one (perhaps the show's best), the over-inked silkscreening process blots out much of this detail.
Without Boo around, sex has become a hard drug: it's the way that Fleabag blots out her uglier memories, and it's also the way that she relives them.
Each October, New Delhi becomes blanketed in a thick smog which blots out the sky until around March, when patches of blue begin to reappear overhead as the smog retreats.
Rojo pulsates both with the motif of blood and the subtly indelible image of a solar eclipse, when an orb blots out the sun, obscuring all but its deep red edges.
Other passengers on the subway are reduced to shadows, the rattle of the train a faint echo of my own deafening heartbeat, and the glass-haze of terror blots out light.
For the most part, the light from the sun blots out our view of Mercury during most of the year, so being able to actually see the tiny planet is a real treat.
Stirred by swarms of motorbikes bumping over potholes, and through builders' heaps of sand, gravel and cement made ubiquitous by the devastating earthquake of 2015, the permanent choking cloud blots out stars in the night sky.
She is a devout loner, a woman who prefers the solitude of the bathroom mirror to a party, who blots out her nights with anonymous sex and obliterating substances, whose default settings are caustic and surly.
In hindsight, the reality of the policy is so monstrous that it blots out the government's arguments in favor of internment at the time — arguments that were also about national security rather than race, and were, therefore, ostensibly neutral.
RAMALLAH, West Bank/TEL AVIV (Reuters) - Instead of its usual artsy or humorous front page, this week's special edition of Time Out Tel Aviv sports an image of an Israeli security barrier so high it blots out the horizon.
I actually agree with you that identity politics on the left often does more harm than good, but this kind of revisionist history blots out a critical part of the story and ignores the causes of our social turmoil.
Some 3,000 people gathered on the southwestern side of the French-governed island to see the "annular solar eclipse" - the moment when the moon blots out most of the sun to create the appearance of a bright ring around its edges.
We turned in to an elementary school's playground, tightroping the length of a sandbox, and I learned that the ring-of-fire eclipse is a semi-regular phenomenon, in which Earth's moon blots out everything but the barest silhouette of the sun.
These, too, are forms of knowledge for that character, a recognition of a potential downfall, and they get drawn into your hand as easily as a Wound that blots out your thoughts or a Burn that rages while you're trying to contemplate a cleave maneuver.
Next Monday will herald the first total solar eclipse visible from the U.S. since 1979—and the first one in a century to span the width of the entire contiguous United States—as the moon blots out the sun and casts a shadow on the Earth.
Every new Melissa McCarthy performance, even in a movie as uneven as The Boss, makes you marvel at her talent: the extravagant physical comedy, the outrageousness that never blots out believability, the skill at parsing out a single gag line so that it multiplies like loaves and fish.
Washington (CNN)There's a terrible uneasiness in our current moment: At a time when we want to believe that we're on the brink of toppling some of our country's remaining anti-LGBTQ barriers, lingering hate not only exists -- it also blots out queer stories before they're even told.
Homesteads and small towns are being battered by mine blasting, hundreds of diesel trucks speed down rural roads dropping sand along the way, stadium lighting is so bright it blots out the night sky, and 24-hour operations go on within a few hundred feet of homes and farms.
This can be amusing, as when a dinner shifts from a group scene to a bulging eye face-off, and there's something undeniably clever about a visual lineup that consists of a looming human skull that blocks a human head that in turn nearly blots out the sun.
In the last 20 to 30 years, we've seen a small but significant number of stories about people who have traditionally been discriminated against in our society — women, the mentally ill, criminals, and even indigenous peoples — experience a reversal of fortunes when the moon takes center stage and blots out the sun.
' God has permitted trafficking, and forbidden usury. Whosoever > receives an admonition from his Lord and gives over, he shall have his past > gains, and his affair is committed to God; but whosoever reverts -- those > are the inhabitants of the Fire, therein dwelling forever. > God blots out usury, but freewill offerings He augments with interest. God > loves not any guilty ingrate.
Bismarck brown (also Bismarck brown Y or Manchester brown) imparts a yellow colour to acid mucins. and an intense brown color to mast cells. One default of this stain is that it blots out any other structure surrounding it and makes the quality of the contrast low. It has to be paired with other stains in order to be useful.
The direction any intermediate spot on the Earth is facing can also be calculated by measuring the angles of the fixed stars and determining how much of the sky is visible. For example, New York City is about 40° north of the equator. The apparent motion of the Sun blots out slightly different parts of the sky from day to day, but over the course of the entire year it sees a dome of 280° (360° - 80°). So for example, both Orion and the Big Dipper are visible during at least part of the year.
The year is 1968, and as the BBC rebroadcasts episodes of the classic SF serial "Nightshade", the townsfolk of Crook Marsham prepare for a lonely Christmas. At the local retirement home, actor Edmund Trevithick learns that a reporter is coming to interview him about his role as Professor Nightshade, and goes to sleep dreaming of past successes. But later that night, the scientists at the local radiotelescope are baffled by a sudden energy surge from an unknown source, which floods their instruments and blots out the signals they were monitoring from a nova in the vicinity of Bellatrix. Trevithick wakes to find that his window has been smashed open, and he faints when an evil voice in the darkness hisses the name of Professor Nightshade.
The phrase "on the beach" is a Royal Navy term that means "retired from the Service." The title also refers to T. S. Eliot's poem The Hollow Men, which includes the lines: Printings of the novel, including the first 1957 edition by William Morrow and Company, NY, contain extracts from Eliot's poem on the title page, under Shute's name, including the above quotation and the concluding lines: The 2000 film ends with a quote from Walt Whitman's poem "On the Beach at Night", describing how a father comforts his small daughter who is frightened as an approaching cloud bank blots out the evening stars one by one. Not to be confused with another Whitman poem, "On the Beach at Night Alone". Although Whitman's poem resembles the plot of Shute's novel, the book does not reference it, as it does Eliot's poem.
The story details a world where a heavy meteor shower, known as "the Fall", impacted with catastrophic force across much of the Northern Hemisphere in 1878, creating a massive dust cloud that blots out the sun. This in turn causes the collapse of Industrialized civilization, which was unable to survive without the ability to raise crops in winter-like conditions that lasted for three years. In order to survive, the British Government, under the leadership of Queen Victoria and Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli, employed the Royal Navy and all merchant shipping to evacuate the population of the British Isles to its colonies in India, Australasia, and South Africa over the next several years. After martial law breaks down in 1881, the rioting British lower classes storm the remaining military outposts in London; unable to escape, Disraeli is killed by rioters and becomes a martyr.
The frivolity and patronizing natures of Alicia and Don Ramon diminish the authority behind their stereotyped view of Mexican natives. In spite of references such as Miss Cherry's to Mexico's “picturesque atmosphere” in “The Education of Popo,” Mena's cast of characters explicitly avoid being confined to this stereotypical framework.Mena, 53. Popo does not fit into Alicia Cherry's conception of a “summer flirtation” and he ultimately refuses to be framed by Alicia's lips, either by the deceptive words emanating from them or by an actual kiss. More obviously, Petra in “The Gold Vanity Set” rebels against Miss Young's desire to commodify her ‘picturesqueness’ by refusing to be photographed, and the Senorita in “The Vine Leaf” blots out her face in the esteemed painting that would literally put her figure in a frame. Even within the painting, the smudging from the face creates a “rude rubbing that in some places has overlapped the justly painted frame of the mirror”.
Dylan tells his audience how to take his new direction amidst a number of laments about the expectations of his audience and the futility of politics: The album closes with "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue", described by Riley as "one of those saddened good-bye songs a lover sings when the separation happens long after the relationship is really over, when lovers know each other too well to bother hiding the truth from each other any longer … What shines through "Baby Blue" is a sadness that blots out past fondness, and a frustration at articulating that sadness at the expense of the leftover affection it springs from." Heylin has a different interpretation, comparing it with "To Ramona" from Another Side of Bob Dylan: "['Baby Blue' is] less conciliatory, the tone crueler, more demanding. If Paul Clayton is indeed the Baby Blue he had in mind, as has been suggested, Dylan was digging away at the very foundation of Clayton's self-esteem." However, the lyric easily fits in with the main theme of the album, Dylan's rejection of political folk, taking the form of a good-bye to his former, protest-folk self, according to the Rough Guide to Bob Dylan.

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