glance
suomi-englanti sanakirjaglance englannista suomeksi
vilkaista, katsahtaa
vilkaisu
lyödä kulmaan
glance englanniksi
(RQ:Shakespeare Sonnets)
(RQ:Disraeli Vivian Grey)
(RQ:Hawthorne Twice-Told Tales)
To look briefly at (something).
(RQ:Scott Tales of My Landlord 1)
(RQ:Scott Redgauntlet)
To cause (something) to move obliquely.
(RQ:Hall Olive-Tree)
(RQ:Dampier New Voyage)
To hit (a ball) lightly, causing it to move in another direction.
(quote-web)
To hit (a ball) with a bat held in a slanted manner; also, to play such a stroke against (the bowler).
To communicate (something) using the eyes.
(RQ:Prior Alma)
(RQ:Robert Browning Poems)
(RQ:Shakespeare Comedy of Errors)
(RQ:Evelyn Diary) King’s gardens, where I observ’d that the Mall gos the whole square thereof next y(sup) wall, and bends with an angle so made as to glace glance y(sup) hall; the angle is of stone.
To make an incidental or passing reflection, often unfavourably, on (a topic); also, to make (an incidental or passing reflection, often unfavourable).
(RQ:Shakespeare Julius Caesar)
(RQ:Swift Tale of a Tub)
(RQ:Carlyle Schiller)
To strike and fly off in an oblique direction; to dart aside.
(RQ:Shakespeare Taming of the Shrew)
(RQ:Shakespeare Merry Wives Q1)
(RQ:Milton Paradise Lost)|year=1873
(RQ:Hale Contemplations)
(RQ:Homer Pope et al Odyssey)
(RQ:Scott Canongate 2)
(RQ:Mary Shelley Mortal Immortal)
To hit a ball with a bat held in a slanted manner.
Of certain juvenile fish, chiefly of the (taxfmt) family: to rapidly touch the side of its parent's body, usually to feed on mucus.
(quote-journal) 494 The unusually high variance in lagoon stage-3 juveniles was caused by one relatively small brood (14) that glanced 36 times in one 30-min observation period.
Of light, etc.: to gleam, to sparkle.
(ux)
(quote-book)|edition=4th|location=London|publisher=(...) T. Sowle,(nb...)|year=1678|year_published=1701|page=195|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=Lz4LrFRtd-wC&pg=PA195|oclc=1015526190|passage=Thou God didſt call, thou didſt cry, thou didſt break my Deafneſs, thou glancedſt, thou didſt ſhine, thou chaſeſt away my Darkneſs.
(RQ:Tennyson In Memoriam)
Of a thing: to move in a way that catches light, and flash or glitter.
(RQ:Milton Poems 1673)
(RQ:Cowper Poems)
(RQ:Scott Pirate)
(RQ:Stowe Uncle Tom's Cabin)
(RQ:Tennyson Idylls)
(RQ:Eddison Worm) those that walked armed before the Witches’ booths, six in company, harnessed as for battle in byrnies of shining bronze, with greaves and shields of bronze and helms that glanced in the sun.
''Often followed by'' at: of the eyes or a person: to look briefly.
(RQ:Shakespeare Midsummer)
(quote-journal) Thomas and James Swords,(nb...)|month=July|year=1796|volume=I (New Series)|page=386|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=jXgEAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA386|oclc=1302195814|passage=Hither come—thou once of men, / Blest with pure science from above; / Thy spirit now returns again / To its native realms of love. / (..) / And as thou glancest hence to there, / Remember that it gave thee birth, / And ''still illumine it'' from ''here''.
(RQ:Irving Sketch Book)
(RQ:Peacock Crotchet Castle) when, suddenly, her eye glanced on something which made her change colour, (..)
(RQ:Eliot Silas Marner)
(RQ:Doyle Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes)
''Often followed by'' at: of a topic: to make an incidental or passing reflection on, often unfavourably; to allude to; to hint at.
(RQ:Shakespeare Measure)
(RQ:Swift Works)
(RQ:Landon Francesca Carrara)
(RQ:Stevenson Catriona)
''Followed by'' by: to pass near without coming into contact.
(RQ:Browne Christian Morals)
(RQ:More Psychodia) / If that; the object gone, away thoſe forms do glance.
(RQ:Macaulay Ancient Rome)
(RQ:Shakespeare Troilus and Cressida Q1)
(RQ:T. Herbert Travaile)
(RQ:Milton Paradise Lost)
(RQ:Dickens Christmas Carol)
(RQ:Chesnutt House Behind the Cedars)
(quote-book)
(quote-song)
A quick movement that catches light, and causes a flash or glitter; also, the flash or glitter.
(RQ:Milton Paradise Lost) ſporting with quick glance / Show to the Sun thir wav’d coats dropt with Gold, (..)|year=1873
(RQ:Milton Samson)
(RQ:Scott Lady of the Lake)
(RQ:Scott Pirate) I likena cummers that can come and gae like a glance of the sun, or the whip of a whirlwind.
A stroke in which the ball is hit with a bat held in a slanted manner.
Of certain juvenile fish, chiefly of the (taxfmt) family: an act of rapidly touching the side of its parent's body, usually to feed on mucus.
An act of striking and flying off in an oblique direction; a deflection.
An incidental or passing allusion or thought, often unfavourable, expressed on a topic.
(RQ:Bacon Learning)
(short for)
Any of various sulphides, mostly dark-coloured, which have a brilliant metallic lustre.
(RQ:Whewell Philosophy)