pallor

தோல் நிற மாற்றம்
definition
noun
But today seedy glamour is being replaced by the dim light of computer screens and the unhealthy pallor of those who stare into them for most of their waking hours.
an unhealthy pale appearance.
translation of 'pallor'
நோயால் அச்சத்தல் ஏற்படும் வெளிறிய தோற்றம்
example
The intense 'pallor' of his complexion, tightly cropped ginger hair, and prominent Adam's apple, only emphasised his lack of stature.
So long as you don't have to look at the graveyard 'pallor' of the rest of my body this is great.
All this blueness is in contrast to the 'pallor' of his complexion and the beginnings of a beard and mustache.
Until then, only workmen sported tans: anybody with pretensions cultivated a 'pallor' .
Her 'pallor' was pale, and her eyes, large, dark and profoundly sad, as if from years of suffering.
Her 'pallor' became pale with the pain and the corners of her mouth stiffened.
But today seedy glamour is being replaced by the dim light of computer screens and the unhealthy 'pallor' of those who stare into them for most of their waking hours.
No individuals have ever been prosecuted, so these satellites have what's called the 'pallor' of respectability.
the deathlike 'pallor' of his face
He had the 'pallor' of a corpse; he had little color to him.
The figure is painted on a plain brown background and thus the focus of the whole work falls on the dark garment and the 'pallor' of the hand and face.
I am now down to eight and a half stone and have a sickly 'pallor' .
His face has the 'pallor' of someone allergic to daylight.
Instead, they stay put and give skin an unhealthy 'pallor' and texture.
It's the place where day becomes night, and everyone leaves with an unhealthy 'pallor' .
There were dark circles under his eyes, and his skin took on a pale 'pallor' .
It begins adagio, and soon an odd 'pallor' settles over the piece.
He had a pale 'pallor' and his flesh did not seem to absorb any heat from the flames licking at the brick of the fire place.
Small and rather shy, Madison usually dressed in black, had the bookish 'pallor' of a scholar, and cut a somber figure.
It coated the world in a pale flurry, casting a ghostlike 'pallor' and creating moon shadows among the skeletons of trees.
So what if journalists poke fun at its more superficial aspects - the cut of the suits, the 'pallor' of the skin, the stains on the shirts?
Credits: Google Translate