No poem by William Shakespeare contains the words "victim" or "bragging". I have no idea what poem you might be thinking of.
'Fade' can indeed be a noun - as in 'a fade to black' in a movie. Fade is its own noun.
To fade means to become lighter or less noticeable. If you keep losing weight, you will fade away. The dark spots fade when you use this cream.
There are none... The only true Fade to Black is Metallica's. Therefore, you fail.
appear
brighten, enhance, intensify
The cast of Fade to Black - 2008 includes: Fernando Biscalchin as Priest Heidi Bradi as Victim
'Fade' can indeed be a noun - as in 'a fade to black' in a movie. Fade is its own noun.
low fade
does gold tone fade?
SPME WILL FADE BUT FADE RESITANT INKS ARE AVAILABLE
its a vergas fade that "THE REY" has
it is when the top and bottom fade away
fade away.......fade out...
White is a color that will not fade.
Fade is one syllable.
No, it is not correct to say "cause opportunities fade in a spoof". This is not a sentence, it is a sentence fragment that is an incoherent assertion.The first word in a sentence is always capitalized.The word 'cause' is a verb meaning 'to make happen'. When a sentence begins with a verb with no subject, the implied subject is 'you'. But an implied subject is only used in an imperative sentence. This is not an imperative sentence, it is a declarative sentence. In this case, the sentence should read: "You cause opportunities to fade in a spoof."The word 'cause' is a noun, a word for the person or thing that is the producer of an effect, result, or consequence. Using 'cause' as noun, the sentence still needs a subject and a verb, for example: "You are the cause of opportunities tofade in a spoof."Or, if the noun 'cause' is the subject, it needs a verb and possibly an object of the verb, for example: "The cause of opportunities to fade in a spoof is inattention.""The cause of opportunities to fade in a spoof will get you again if you don't keep your eyes open."Then we come to the use of the noun 'spoof'. The word means a humorous imitation of something, a mockery or a parody. It is very unclear how opportunities could fade in a spoof! But, let's give it a try.Often the cause of opportunities to fade is a spoof of sincere intentions.A cause of opportunities to fade is a plausible but deceptive spoof.There could be any number of variations to the theme, but since your original group of words is incomprehensible, it's difficult to determine which would actually work for your purposes.
To fade means to become lighter or less noticeable. If you keep losing weight, you will fade away. The dark spots fade when you use this cream.