Damascus.
Saul was drawing near to Damascus when suddenly a light from heaven shined around him.
Black light
Baldur was the God of Light because he was so bright (intelligent) that light shined from him.
The correct wording is "you shone a light in the room." "Shined" is the past tense of "to shine" when used to refer to objects or surfaces, whereas "shone" is used when referring to light emitted by a source or objects that emit light.
That would be called a spotlight.
it makes a rainbow!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! :D
yes and no it depends on how bright it is
Jesus is the Light, the Truth. Light when shined in the darkness reveals all. Evil works in the darkness and tries to stay hidden. Jesus shined his light to reveal the truth because the truth has nothing to hide.
All of them are actually correct. When giving off light it is ; the pearl shone like the sun. The pearl always shines like the sun (present tense). shine / shone When polishing it (with wax) it is a regular verb. We shined the pearl with a cloth, and it shone like an expensive diamond. shine / shined I shined my shoes, and I shined my teapot with silver cleaner. To shine a light (You create the action, not the sun) is a regular verb. He shined the light in the deer's eyes, and the deer stood still.
I shined the light laser in his eyes and it stung his eyes ALOT.
All Day. It can be flown at night if a light is shined on it.
Both "shined" and "shone" are correct, but they are used in different contexts. "Shined" is the past tense and past participle of "shine" when it means to give off light. "Shone" is the past tense and past participle of "shine" when it means to shine brightly or to be exceptionally clear.
Selenium is a semiconductor with a black form that was used in xerography because it conducts electricity better when light is shined on it. However, use of this material is being phased out.