What's the difference between dully and lustre?

Dully


Definition:

  • (adv.) In a dull manner; stupidly; slowly; sluggishly; without life or spirit.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) We left with a wind-up frog that seemed entrancingly lifelike in the shop floor demo, but at home just trundled dully up and down the bathtub until it caught black mould and was banished to the airing cupboard.
  • (2) About suffering they were never wrong, The old Masters: how well they understood Its human position: how it takes place While someone else is eating or opening a window or just walking dully along But Swartz's death came like a thunderbolt in cyberspace, because this insanely talented, idealistic, complex, diminutive lad was a poster boy for everything that we value about the networked world.
  • (3) She felt hollow and lifeless and compared herself to the calm centre of a tornado, "moving dully along in the middle of the surrounding hullabaloo", she writes.
  • (4) Standard laboratory blood tests did not reveal any remarkable significant leukocyte abnormalities, but flow cytometric analysis of lymphocytes revealed a paucity of B cells stained with anti-light chain antibodies, and an increased proportion of T lymphocytes which were dully-stained with anti-CD5 monoclonal antibody.
  • (5) (1969), a dully temporising Hollywood account of the life of Che Guevara, in which at one point Sharif’s Guevara is confronted by Jack Palance ’s Fidel Castro with the mumbled expostulation: “Che, sometimes I just don’t understand you.” The Last Valley (1971) and The Horsemen (1971) were poorly rated would-be spectacles.
  • (6) Sister chromatid exchanges occurring in these chromosomes are apparent as interchanges of brightly and dully fluorescing chromatids.
  • (7) Without protease treatment, only the platelets were specifically, though dully, fluorescent.

Lustre


Definition:

  • (n.) Brilliancy; splendor; brightness; glitter.
  • (n.) Renown; splendor; distinction; glory.
  • (n.) A candlestick, chandelier, girandole, or the like, generally of an ornamental character.
  • (n.) The appearance of the surface of a mineral as affected by, or dependent upon, peculiarities of its reflecting qualities.
  • (n.) A substance which imparts luster to a surface, as plumbago and some of the glazes.
  • (n.) A fabric of wool and cotton with a lustrous surface, -- used for women's dresses.
  • (v. t.) To make lustrous.
  • (n.) Same as Luster.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Disney's new chief executive, Bob Iger, has wasted no time restoring some lustre to the Magic Kingdom.
  • (2) When that lustre goes, however, we're just left with a large, unpleasant shop.
  • (3) The once pristine Boulevard Mobutu has lost its lustre.
  • (4) The macular changes consisted of an orange-like ophthalmoscopic appearance and a decreased macular lustre.
  • (5) The prime minister's officials played down the significance of the decision, which has taken some of the lustre off his coup of becoming the first European leader invited to Washington for talks with Obama since his inauguration in January.
  • (6) But has Frances botched her chances with lack-lustre flavour?
  • (7) For Max Hastings, as for Gove, the looming threat of a German Europe justified Britain's cause in the first world war and gives undying lustre to our boys' sacrifice in the trenches.
  • (8) Natalie Maines and the sisters Martie Maguire and Emily Robison have the lustre of women raised on healthy diets and quality grooming products.
  • (9) He may lack broadcasting experience, but his successful transformation of a much-loved British brand that had lost its lustre is seen by some as providing the perfect template for an ITV renaissance.
  • (10) During the long period when Caravaggio’s name had lost its lustre, many of his paintings found themselves reattributed to these Utrecht painters and vice versa: at some point 70% of the paintings in the National Gallery exhibition were said to be by Caravaggio.
  • (11) As a direct ingredient it would be easy to identify, but unfortunately mica remains as part of a complex mix of materials that are used to make colour pigments and lustres.” Boyd says the company has not knowingly purchased any materials containing natural mica since 2014.
  • (12) While the theory runs that the No 7's disquiet is due more to pay-rise jockeying than a love deficit of the Bernabéu, his performances have not lost lustre despite Madrid's poor start to La Liga.
  • (13) With 3D tickets costing on average 30% more at Odeon and Vue cinemas than other films, and with the added cost of glasses, which small children and those who wear contact lenses and spectacles often find uncomfortable, the format is losing its lustre.
  • (14) A method for tooth surface lustre measurements with a scanning reflectance sensor system is described.
  • (15) However, the Gujarat model begins to lose its lustre if you look at other development indicators.
  • (16) There are policies aplenty but the issue is how they hang together and whether Miliband possesses the strategic skills and has sufficient supporters, including among the Blairites and trade unions, as well as the personal lustre to deliver at a price the electorate is willing to pay.
  • (17) Pyne said on Wednesday the changes would add “lustre” to the parliament.
  • (18) Equally, his distinctive voice added lustre to the TV version of Animal Farm (1999), as Boxer.
  • (19) (5) Clinically the non-gamma2 amalgams are remarkable for superior marginal integrity and, seemingly, also for improved persistence of surface lustre.
  • (20) Erdoğan is regarded as having lost much of his international lustre.

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