Crossword clues for moonbeam
moonbeam
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Moonbeam \Moon"beam`\, n. A ray of light from the moon.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Wiktionary
n. A shaft of moonlight;''Webster's College Dictionary'', Random House, 2001.
WordNet
Wikipedia
Moonbeam may refer to:
- Moonlight, the light that reaches Earth from the Moon
- Moonbeam, series of five aeroplanes built by Powel Crosley, Jr.
- Moonbeam II, plane flown by aviation pioneer Edwin Moon in 1910
- Moonbeam III or Moonbeam IV, yachts designed by William Fife
- Moon Beams, jazz album by Bill Evans
- "Moonbeam", a song from Men Without Hats's album Pop Goes the World
- Moonbeam, Ontario, a township in Canada
- Jerry Brown, 34th and 39th Governor of California (1975-1983, 2011–present), nicknamed 'Governor Moonbeam' by Mike Royko, a Chicago Sun-Times columnist
- Moonbeams, a children's cancer charity set up by William Powers in 1992
- Moonbeam (band), a trance music group from Russia
- Moonbeam, a cultivar of the Coreopsis verticillata flowering plant
Moonbeam is a Russian electronic music project, founded in 2003 by brothers Vitaly and Pavel Khvaleev. The name was coined by one of the project's singers, Chris Lunsford. By writing their own house, techno, trance, dubstep, and minimal techno tracks and remixes, the duo has amassed fans around the world. In 2010 Moonbeam was listed in DJ Magazine's Top 100 DJs at position number 42, becoming the third Russian musician in history to make the list.
Usage examples of "moonbeam".
No language could give an adequate idea of the marvelous bewitchment and beauty of their united movements, and as they flew over the dark smooth turf, with the flower-laden trees drooping dewily about them, and the yellow moonbeams like melted amber beneath their noiseless feet, .
Her eyes fluttered open to catch moonbeams slanting through her window.
In those days her name was Gekko, Moonbeam, and though there were many foreigners in Nagasaki at that time, she knew not one of them, her House catering only to Japanese of the highest order.
Opposite the tower stood the Temple of Paladine, its white walls shining with a pale radiance, as if they had captured the moonbeams of Solinari and used them to brighten the night.
At last a northwest wind drove it off the shore, and on the second clear day the little steamer Moonbeam, engaged in the porgy fishery, came up to the cove with a small sloop in tow and three dejected, exhausted, and thoroughly disgusted navigators on board.
Discouraged and sick at heart, they sank down under the weight of their terrible disappointment and knew nothing more until they found themselves on board the porgy steamer Moonbeam, steaming up Mackerel Cove.
Only pallid light as weak as moonbeams managed to pierce the frosted glass, and the glow from the microfilm machine did more to illuminate her troubled face.
But when she looked beyond the brilliant diamond and far above the magical sea, there the lions stood, on their moonscape, shimmering silver as moonbeams caressed their fleecy coats.
Careful not to blow out the flame, Akeela floated toward the windows and closed the curtains one by one, shutting out every small moonbeam.
It is a delicate-featured image of a bodhisattva, not unlike Kwannon, in garments woven of moonbeams.
Still following the note of the bell, they entered the shade of those woods, lighted only by the moonbeams, that glided down between the leaves, and threw a tremulous uncertain gleam upon the steep track they were winding.
The moonbeams had stolen in to the beech clump, frosting the boles and boughs, casting a fine ghostly grey over the shadow-patterned beech-mast.
To and fro swung the cart in the rush of the swollen river, up and down beside them the carcases of the horses rose and fell with the surge of the water, on whose surface the broken moonbeams played and quivered.
Those portraits of the freaks were more disturbing now, in the fading moonbeams that barely limned them, than they were in the uncompromising light of day, for it was within the power of the human imagination to conjure up worse atrocities than even God could commit.
Around this opening, which had, possibly, for ages permitted a free entrance to the brilliant moonbeams that now illumined the vast pile, grew a quantity of creeping plants, whose delicate green branches stood out in bold relief against the clear azure of the firmament, while large masses of thick, strong fibrous shoots forced their way through the chasm, and hung floating to and fro, like so many waving strings.