verbπShareTo shade, cloud or darken."The artist chose to shadow this corner of the painting."appearancenatureenvironmentChat with AIVocabulary GamePractice Reading
verbπShareTo block light or radio transmission from."The tall building shadowed the park, making it hard for the grass to grow. "technologymediacommunicationsignalelectronicsChat with AIVocabulary GamePractice Reading
verbπShareTo secretly or discreetly track or follow another, to keep under surveillance."The detective shadowed the suspect for three days, hoping to catch him in the act. "policeactionmilitaryChat with AIVocabulary GamePractice Reading
verbπShareTo represent faintly and imperfectly."The old black and white photograph shadowed the vibrancy of her childhood. "appearanceartliteratureChat with AIVocabulary GamePractice Reading
verbπShareTo hide; to conceal."The trees shadowed the picnic table, making it cool and shady. "actionappearanceChat with AIVocabulary GamePractice Reading
verbπShareTo accompany (a professional) during the working day, so as to learn about an occupation one intends to take up."Maria shadowed a nurse at the hospital to learn more about the job before deciding if she wanted to study nursing. "jobeducationbusinessworkChat with AIVocabulary GamePractice Reading
verbπShareTo make (an identifier, usually a variable) inaccessible by declaring another of the same name within the scope of the first."In the function, the outer variable count was shadowed by declaring another variable named count inside the function, so the outer count was inaccessible within that function. "computingtechnicaltechnologywordlanguageChat with AIVocabulary GamePractice Reading
verbπShareTo apply the shadowing process to (the contents of ROM)."The programmer shadowed the ROM's data into RAM to improve the program's speed. "computingelectronicstechnologyprocessChat with AIVocabulary GamePractice Reading