glare• Claude put down his fork and glared across the table.• He sat there in silence, glaring angrily.• "You can go if you want, but I'm staying, " Denise said glaring at him.• I added cheerfully, but Lilly glared at me, and we ate our cinnamontoast in silence.• No one complained, or even glared at me.• He glared at Newman and then left the room with Carver.• Peggy Soong stood behind him and glared at the woman sitting opposite Quinn.• Adam glared back at him and looked away.• Miguel glared back like a corneredrat, lifting himself up with the stick.
glare at• Rogerglared angrily at her across the dinner table.• Lilly just glared at me when I asked her what was wrong.
glare2 ●○○ noun
1[singular, uncountableU]LIGHT a bright unpleasant light which hurts your eyes 刺眼的强光
3.the glare of publicity/the media/public scrutiny etcPUBLICIZE/MAKE KNOWNthe full attention of newspapers, television etc, especially when you do not want it 舆论/媒体/公众等的密切关注
the glare of something• Her eyes were closed against the glare of lights overhead, but still their dazzle came through.• Celandines and violets grew there bright and innocent against the glare of the bones.• Now having been discharged they're convalescing from surgery with a family in Oxfordshire away from the glare ofpublicity.• Her blackface glistened in the glare of the stage lights.• These young people have been raised in the glare of cease-less mediaviolence and incitement to every depravity of act and spirit.• In one accident I witnessed, the take off was being made towards the glare of the sun.• Even as it was, the glare of the Earth, filling half the sky, drowned all but the brighter stars.