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Cascades   /kæskˈeɪdz/   Listen
Cascades

noun
1.
A mountain range in the northwestern United States extending through Washington and Oregon and northern California; a part of the Coast Range.  Synonyms: Cascade Mountains, Cascade Range.



Cascade

noun
1.
A small waterfall or series of small waterfalls.
2.
A succession of stages or operations or processes or units.  "Separation of isotopes by a cascade of processes"
3.
A sudden downpour (as of tears or sparks etc) likened to a rain shower.  Synonym: shower.  "A sudden cascade of sparks"
verb
1.
Rush down in big quantities, like a cascade.  Synonym: cascade down.
2.
Arrange (open windows) on a computer desktop so that they overlap each other, with the title bars visible.



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"Cascades" Quotes from Famous Books



... windows of Brown Thomas, silk mercers. Cascades of ribbons. Flimsy China silks. A tilted urn poured from its mouth a flood of bloodhued poplin: lustrous blood. The huguenots brought that here. La causa e santa! Tara tara. Great chorus that. Taree tara. Must be washed in rainwater. Meyerbeer. Tara: ...
— Ulysses • James Joyce

... at this season that enthusiastic anglers always get water on the brain. Their dreams are of gurgling brooks. They have visions of mill-ponds, with beautiful little cascades sluicing into them over dams. They stand, in imagination, on bridges, in the eddies beneath which they discern the wagging of silvery tails and rosy fins; and a very common form of nightmare with them is to fancy that ...
— Punchinello, Vol. 1, No. 6, May 7, 1870 • Various

... stockaded palace, the escort commenced to fire their matchlocks. The view here is described as very lovely, and giving some conception of European variety of vegetation, with tropical luxuriance. Farm-houses, rich fields, foaming cascades, and bright green meadows covered with flowers, met the eye on every side; and above all towered the great Abyssinian range, some thousand feet perpendicularly overhead, with its summits crested with clouds. The crowd of spectators was immense, and were ...
— Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, No. 341, March, 1844, Vol. 55 • Various

... at first into an inky blackness and then into a region of continually increasing phosphorescence. Cavor's despatches show him to be curiously regardless of detail for a scientific man, but we gather that this light was due to the streams and cascades of water—"no doubt containing some phosphorescent organism"—that flowed ever more abundantly downward towards the Central Sea. And as he descended, he says, "The Selenites also became luminous." And at last ...
— The First Men In The Moon • H. G. Wells

... woody castellated height, the traveler reaches Terni on the tumultuous Nar, the wildest and most rebellious of all the tributaries. It was to save the surrounding country from its outbreaks that the channel was made by the Romans B.C. 271, the first of several experiments which resulted in these cascades, which have been more sung and oftener painted than any other in the world. The beauty of Terni is so hackneyed that enthusiasm over it becomes cockney, yet the beauty of hackneyed things is as eternal as the verity of ...
— Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, Vol. 15, - No. 86, February, 1875 • Various


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