I think it would be daylight all the time.
Quote 57: "The rock struck Piggy a glancing blow from chin to knee; the conch exploded into a thousand white fragments and ceased to exist." Chapter 11, pg. 164.
When Piggy was hit by the rock, he was holding the conch, so it was also destroyed. At the scene where he was killed it says, "the conch exploded into a thousand white fragments and ceased to exist."
"Ceased to be" is the correct phrase to use when something has stopped existing or functioning. For example, "The company ceased to be profitable." "Has ceased to be" is also grammatically correct but may sound more formal.
Ceased means to stopThe word 'ceased' means 'finished' or 'ended', as in:The fighting has ceased.
He ceased to exist. Both sides ceased fire. Their attention ceased as the teacher went on. Cease: Stop, Fade Away.
Ceased production in 2004.Ceased production in 2004.
probably this happened to me and it made my engine run rough and then eventually it ceased
Probably not ! The French Franc was consigned to history with the introduction of the Euro. Since then, the Franc ceased to be legal tender.
No. A proper use of ceased would be, "After they stopped breathing, they ceased to exist." The word you need is seized, which means to take hold of. "They seized the chance."
Forests do not occur in cities. The site the city is built on probably was once forest, but the forest ceased to be when it was cleared to build a City
31.7 billion years (to 3 sig fig). Long after the earth and probably the sun have ceased to exist.
Both are correct in proper context. The preterite indicates an action in the past: "The fighting ceased." The pluperfect indicates action prior to a main verb in the past: "It was quiet because the fighting had ceased."