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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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WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Cascades" Quotes from Famous Books



... ready to answer. She threw up little cascades of water with her hands. Sam, watching, was suddenly struck by the fact that they were not at ...
— The Huntress • Hulbert Footner

... round tower. But Shotaye was not affected by scenery. Walking along the brink to the west she at last reached the upper end, where twelve days ago she had ascended, and where the brook, swollen by late rains, now gushed down the ledges in a series of murmuring cascades. Here she began her descent, and as the sun disappeared behind threatening clouds over the western mountains, she entered her home again. Shotaye had spent nearly the whole day on the mesa, had spent it profitably, and was—so ...
— The Delight Makers • Adolf Bandelier

... this soul the spirit of man was by many supposed to be a particle like a spark given off from a flame. All other things, animate or inanimate, brutes, plants, stones, nay, even natural forms, rivers, mountains, cascades, grottoes, have each an ...
— History of the Intellectual Development of Europe, Volume I (of 2) - Revised Edition • John William Draper

... jolly fine music! What a Balthazar's feast! They're smashing the crockery in there. Awfully swell! Now it's being lit up; red balls in the air, and it jumps, and it flies! Oh! oh! what a lot of lanterns in the trees! It's confoundedly pleasant! There's water flowing everywhere, fountains, cascades, water which sings, oh! with the voice of a ...
— L'Assommoir • Emile Zola

... the trees, to sell for fuel, and the billhooks of their mothers that hacked away the bushes and grubbed up their very roots to burn on the household cooking hole. Then the torrential rains of the south-west monsoon came down on the naked, defenceless, parched and cracked soil and swept it in muddy cascades down to the sea, leaving flats of bare rock, strewn thick with round stones, sore to the best-shod foot of man and cruel to the hoofs of a horse. About and among the huts of the unswept and malodorous hamlet just above the shore there were fine trees, mango, tamarind, babool and bor, ...
— Concerning Animals and Other Matters • E.H. Aitken, (AKA Edward Hamilton)


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