Sun or moon ? What's more beautiful ?
By Chillingout
@Chillingout (811)
Italy
39 responses
@shywolf (4514)
• United States
20 Jan 07
I find the moon and the stars to be far more beautiful than the sun. I also am not a big fan of being really too hot *laugh* But I like that much better than the cold winter.
It's funny that I love and romanticize the idea of the moon and stars so much, since I am really more of a daytime person than a night owl. But I guess that I am just such a romantic at heart, and poets often write about the stars and the moon above. It is hard not to view them as being tied to romantic thoughts.
@sindhupradeep (369)
• India
26 Nov 06
Both are beautiful but in different ways. The moon is so beautiful & romantic in the nights and the sun is beautiful during day time & in winter you luv the sun a lot.
1 person likes this
@Chillingout (811)
• Italy
26 Nov 06
you are right both can be beautiful but also annoying sometimes
@doncris (637)
• Romania
23 Jan 07
Sun of course! Much warmer and more positively connoted! The moon has a lot of mystery behind it and besides kisses in it's light it has nothing else good attached to it than: werewolves, vampires and zombies.:P No, really, I'm not holding anything against the moon, it's just that the sun is the clear symbol of daylight, of warmth, of life.
@Poison_Girl (4150)
• United States
28 Nov 06
I like the moon and cool night air. I LOVE when the moon's full and bright.
1 person likes this
@maferick (1583)
• Brazil
23 Jan 07
its hard choose one of then,both are wonderful!!the sun gives us energy at the day to do our work and all stuff and the moon is sooo poetic,makes us feels the energy of love..i love both and couldnt live withouth then..
@Chillingout (811)
• Italy
25 Nov 06
the flower you have in your profile wouldn't exist without the sun !
@mihai80 (865)
• Romania
29 Nov 06
Moonn.. The Moon is Earth's only natural satellite. It has no formal English name other than "the Moon", although it is occasionally called Luna (Latin: moon), or Selene (Greek: moon), to distinguish it from the generic term "moon" (referring to any of the various natural satellites of other planets). Its symbol is a crescent (?). The related adjective for the Moon is lunar (again from the Latin root), but this is not found in combination with the forms seleno-/-selene (again from the Greek) and -cynthion (from the Lunar deity Cynthia).
@Chillingout (811)
• Italy
29 Nov 06
especially if you are at the beach :P
Without sun there wouldn't be life on earth...
but without moon ?