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shadow (n.)

Old English sceadwe, sceaduwe "the effect of interception of sunlight, dark image cast by someone or something when interposed between an object and a source of light," oblique cases ("to the," "from the," "of the," "in the") of sceadu (see shade (n.)). Shadow is to shade (n.) as meadow is to mead (n.2). Similar formation in Old Saxon skado, Middle Dutch schaeduwe, Dutch schaduw, Old High German scato, German schatten, Gothic skadus "shadow, shade."

From mid-13c. as "darkened area created by shadows, shade." From early 13c. in sense "anything unreal;" mid-14c. as "a ghost;" late 14c. as "a foreshadowing, prefiguration." Meaning "imitation, copy" is from 1690s. Sense of "the faintest trace" is from 1580s; that of "a spy who follows" is from 1859.

As a designation of members of an opposition party chosen as counterparts of the government in power, it is recorded from 1906. Shadow of Death (c. 1200) translates Vulgate umbra mortis (Psalms xxiii.4, etc.), which itself translates Greek skia thanatou, perhaps a mistranslation of a Hebrew word for "intense darkness." In "Beowulf," Grendel is a sceadugenga, a shadow-goer, and another word for "darkness" is sceaduhelm. To be afraid of one's (own) shadow "be very timorous" is from 1580s.

shadow (v.)

Middle English schadowen, Kentish ssedwi, from late Old English sceadwian "to protect as with covering wings" (also see overshadow), from the root of shadow (n.). Similar formation in Old Saxon skadoian, Dutch schaduwen, Old High German scatewen, German (über)schatten. From mid-14c. as "provide shade;" late 14c. as "cast a shadow over" (literal and figurative), from early 15c. as "darken" (in illustration, etc.). Meaning "to follow like a shadow" is from c. 1600 in an isolated instance; not attested again until 1872. Related: Shadowed; shadowing.

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Definitions of shadow from WordNet
1
shadow (n.)
shade within clear boundaries;
shadow (n.)
an unilluminated area;
Synonyms: darkness / dark
shadow (n.)
something existing in perception only;
Synonyms: apparition / phantom / phantasm / phantasma / fantasm
shadow (n.)
a premonition of something adverse;
a shadow over his happiness
shadow (n.)
an indication that something has been present;
Synonyms: trace / vestige / tincture
shadow (n.)
refuge from danger or observation;
he felt secure in his father's shadow
shadow (n.)
a dominating and pervasive presence;
he received little recognition working in the shadow of his father
shadow (n.)
a spy employed to follow someone and report their movements;
Synonyms: tail / shadower
shadow (n.)
an inseparable companion;
the poor child was his mother's shadow
2
shadow (v.)
follow, usually without the person's knowledge;
The police are shadowing her
shadow (v.)
cast a shadow over;
Synonyms: shade / shade off
shadow (v.)
make appear small by comparison;
Synonyms: overshadow / dwarf
From wordnet.princeton.edu