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deadlight
/ ˈɛˌɪ /
noun
nautical
a bull's-eye let into the deck or hull of a vessel to admit light to a cabin
a shutter of wood or metal for sealing off a porthole or cabin window
a skylight designed not to be opened
Word History and Origins
Origin of deadlight1
Example Sentences
How unsettling his performance is: when he’s being jolly in luring Georgie to the sewer, there’s something of the serial killer to him, rather than the immortal creature from the deadlights.
“That’s what I minded most, about the storm,” she added, “four days shut away down there with the deadlights up.”
My deadlights was more misty than I like to have 'em.
To his second officer he had expressed a desire for a typhoon that would roll the deadlights out of his boat, and blow the hyphenated “garden truck” into the Sulu Sea.
The deadlight of the porthole had been unshipped and the cabin was flooded with dazzling sunlight.
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