Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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Fergie was 78, and sang "London Bridge" with a glow-in-the-dark cane.
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The night before I left for New Orleans, we lay on my bed holding hands, staring up at the glow-in-the-dark galaxy I had painted on my ceiling.
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If you're communing with nature this weekend -- what could be better than stumbling across some glow-in-the-dark mushrooms?
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The Victorians knew enough to make glow-in-the-dark items, and the numerals seem (somehow) to glow anyway.
Even Being Overworked Is No Excuse For A Lack Of Inspiration « The Graveyard
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In this study, 284 children between three and 14 years old were given the option between edible items (lollipops, fruit-flavored chewy candies, fruit-flavored crunchy wafers, and sweet and tart hard candies) and non-edible items (stretch pumpkin men, large glow-in-the-dark insects, Halloween-themed stickers and pencils).
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Later, Mr. Lomma devised a glow-in-the-dark course with a cosmic feel.
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After finally catching and stopping another one of the assistants, she explained that I was walking in a special section of the show, without lights, wearing glow-in-the-dark clothes and leading a glow-in-the-dark dance troupe.
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I hit the glow-in-the-dark button on my watch and started counting heartbeats.
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Carp, catfish and other glow-in-the-dark sea monsters that stink to high heaven and if you eat enough of them you won´t need that reflector light on your bicycle any more at night on your way to the hospital.
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On a swing through New England, the Fergusons narrowly miss Dartmouth's Second Annual Campus Sex Screening, a supposedly health-promoting event where, the flyers promised, "sexperts" would be giving "free demonstrations!" and the party favors included dental dams, glow-in-the-dark condoms and Ben & Jerry's ice cream.
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