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The pale globes could not light every corner of the twisting steps.
There was only one street light, its pale globe obscured by the branches of a tree.
There was some sort of dim, scattered light ahead, beyond the pale globes.
At her command, the pale globes in the room suddenly dimmed.
Her buttocks were pale globes in the harsh light.
I could see the pale globes of her buttocks as she pirouetted and kicked for depth.
The source of the blue light was revealed when we passed an exposed pale globe that was anchored to the wall overhead.
Bulbs in pale globes lit the corridor at intervals, the light reflecting off shiny walls.
They were a bit darker, he noticed, and the pale globes were a little swollen, signs of his baby growing within her flat belly.
The pale globes winked out.
The globus pallidus (Latin for "pale globe") also known as paleostriatum, is a sub-cortical structure of the brain.
And we'll be darned happy to see that pale globe swinging in space when we get back-provided, of course, that we do get back."
And overhead in the cavern, barely visible in the blue glow of the last of the pale globes, was a high ceiling of glistening ice.
They walked northward with a curious feeling of disappointment in the exercise, while the city hung its pale globes of light above them in a haze of summer evening.
The pallidum consists of a large structure called the globus pallidus ("pale globe") together with a smaller ventral extension called the ventral pallidum.
Within the jungle itself, pale globes of red and yellow phosphorescence jiggled and danced-not gracefully like the radiant gossamers in Hyperion's forests, but nervously, almost malevolently.
Her feet stood upon the sun, her body bent itself athwart the sky, and upon the far horizon in the east her hands held the pale globe of the rising moon.
He recognized some of the food as plants he had scanned on the way through the gardens-the peach-pear fruit, for one, a good dozen of the pale globes piled into a pyramid that was topped with a vivid red bell-shape that was probably a flower-but the rest smelled too appetizing not to be edible.