Everything as long as you have eyes
Fagnut
Faded
How? When? Where? Why? To what extent? An adverb adds information about a verb, adjective, phrase or another adverb. Examples:In the sentence 'He looked carefully', looked is the verb, carefully is the adverb, adding information about the verb 'looked.'In the sentence 'She was very happy', happy is an adjective telling us about the noun (She), and very is an adverb, telling us the extent of her happiness.For more information, see 'Related links' below.
If there is no light you can not see. There is only blackness. This is quite disconcerting. If you put your hand in front of your eyes you can not see it. If the room is dark ie no light then you can not see.
There is no longest wave-length for light. It can be infinitely long (just as light waves could be infinitely short). The longest visible light that humans can see is about 750 nanometers long, which is 0.00075 of a millimeter. This color would be a shade of red. Some other animals and insects can see slightly longer wavelengths, and many can not even see what we can.
No, to see objects without the presence of light is impossible. Even a little light will help you see an object. Light has to reflect from the object to the eye to allow you to see it.
1. After struggling with his taxes all day, he was a complete wreck. 2. If you drive too fast, you may have a wreck and hurt someone. 3. The politician knew that a scandal could wreck his career.
faded
We can see a fa light when we looked carefully?
He picked up a piece of metal and looked at it REALLY carefully, and he could see inside the atoms.
As I looked off into the distance I could see the beacon of light that was leading our ship safely to dock.
That would depend on your speed relative to the mirror. If you were holding it in front of you, yes. If it was stationary and you were passing it, no.
You could if you looked it up on Google or checked an Atlus, yes.
Light takes time to travel, so light reaching us from a million light years away has taken that long to travel to us. We see what it looked like when the light left.
As I looked forward I could see the vast canyons ahead
How? When? Where? Why? To what extent? An adverb adds information about a verb, adjective, phrase or another adverb. Examples:In the sentence 'He looked carefully', looked is the verb, carefully is the adverb, adding information about the verb 'looked.'In the sentence 'She was very happy', happy is an adjective telling us about the noun (She), and very is an adverb, telling us the extent of her happiness.For more information, see 'Related links' below.
Well if we didn't have light then we could not see.
He looked across the garden, but he did not see the cat anywhere.He looked across the garden, but he did not see the cat anywhere.He looked across the garden, but he did not see the cat anywhere.He looked across the garden, but he did not see the cat anywhere.He looked across the garden, but he did not see the cat anywhere.He looked across the garden, but he did not see the cat anywhere.He looked across the garden, but he did not see the cat anywhere.He looked across the garden, but he did not see the cat anywhere.He looked across the garden, but he did not see the cat anywhere.He looked across the garden, but he did not see the cat anywhere.He looked across the garden, but he did not see the cat anywhere.
When they looked at the ring closely, they could just about see the engraving.