Glance /(?)/
Glance
n.
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A sudden flash of light or splendor.
Swift as the lightning glance.
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A quick cast of the eyes; a quick or a casual look; a swift survey; a glimpse.
Dart not scornful glances from those eyes.
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An incidental or passing thought or allusion.
How fleet is a glance of the mind.
- A name given to some sulphides, mostly dark-colored, which have a brilliant metallic luster, as the sulphide of copper, called copper glance. (Min.)
Phrases & Compounds
- Glance coal
- anthracite; a mineral composed chiefly of carbon.
- Glance cobalt
- cobaltite, or gray cobalt.
- Glance copper
- chalcocite.
- Glance wood
- a hard wood grown in Cuba, and used for gauging instruments, carpenters' rules, etc.
Glance
v. i.
imp. & p. p. Glanced; p. pr. & vb. n. Glancing
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To shoot or emit a flash of light; to shine; to flash.
From art, from nature, from the schools, Let random influences glance, Like light in many a shivered lance, That breaks about the dappled pools.
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To strike and fly off in an oblique direction; to dart aside. ”Your arrow hath glanced”.
On me the curse aslope Glanced on the ground.
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To look with a sudden, rapid cast of the eye; to snatch a momentary or hasty view.
The poet's eye, in a fine frenzy rolling, Doth glance from heaven to earth, from earth to heaven.
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To make an incidental or passing reflection; to allude; to hint; -- often with at.
Wherein obscurely Caesar's ambition shall be glanced at.
He glanced at a certain reverend doctor.
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To move quickly, appearing and disappearing rapidly; to be visible only for an instant at a time; to move interruptedly; to twinkle.
And all along the forum and up the sacred seat, His vulture eye pursued the trip of those small glancing feet.
Glance
v. t.
- To shoot or dart suddenly or obliquely; to cast for a moment; as, to glance the eye.
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To hint at; to touch lightly or briefly. [Obs.]
In company I often glanced it.