gleam
verb /ɡliːm/
/ɡliːm/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they gleam | /ɡliːm/ /ɡliːm/ |
he / she / it gleams | /ɡliːmz/ /ɡliːmz/ |
past simple gleamed | /ɡliːmd/ /ɡliːmd/ |
past participle gleamed | /ɡliːmd/ /ɡliːmd/ |
-ing form gleaming | /ˈɡliːmɪŋ/ /ˈɡliːmɪŋ/ |
- [intransitive] to shine with a pale clear light
- The moonlight gleamed on the water.
- Her eyes gleamed in the dark.
Synonyms shineshine- gleam
- glow
- sparkle
- glisten
- shimmer
- glitter
- twinkle
- glint
- shine to produce or reflect light, especially brightly:
- The sun was shining and the sky was blue.
- gleam to shine with a clear bright or pale light, especially a reflected light:
- Moonlight gleamed on the water.
- glow (often of something hot or warm) to produce a steady light that is not very bright:
- The end of his cigarette glowed red.
- sparkle to shine brightly with small flashes of light:
- The diamonds sparkled in the light.
- glisten (of something wet) to shine:
- The road glistened wet after the rain.
- shimmer to shine with a soft light that seems to shake slightly:
- Everything seemed to shimmer in the heat.
- glitter to shine brightly with small flashes of reflected light:
- The ceiling of the cathedral glittered with gold.
- twinkle to shine with a light that changes rapidly from bright to faint to bright again:
- Stars twinkled in the sky.
- glint to give small bright flashes of reflected light:
- The blade of the knife glinted in the darkness.
- to shine/gleam/sparkle/glisten/shimmer/glitter/glint on something
- to shine/gleam/glow/sparkle/glisten/shimmer/glitter/twinkle/glint with something
- to shine/gleam/sparkle/glisten/shimmer/glitter/glint in the sunlight
- to shine/gleam/glisten/shimmer/glitter/glint in the moonlight
- the stars shine/sparkle/glitter/twinkle
- somebody’s eyes shine/gleam/glow/sparkle/glisten/glitter/twinkle/glint
- to shine/gleam/glow/glitter brightly
- to shine/gleam/glow/shimmer softly
Extra Examples- The knife's blade gleamed dully in the dark.
- A light gleamed faintly from a first floor window.
- The evening light gleamed softly through the window.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- dully
- faintly
- softly
- …
- with
- gleam golden, white, etc.
- [intransitive] to look very clean or bright
- gleam (with something) The house was gleaming with fresh white paint.
- + adj. Her teeth gleamed white against the tanned skin of her face.
Extra Examples- The long oak table gleamed with polish.
- The pebble beach gleamed white in the moonlight.
- [intransitive] if a person’s eyes gleam with a particular emotion, or an emotion gleams in a person’s eyes, the person shows that emotion
- gleam (with something) His eyes gleamed with amusement.
- gleam (in something) Amusement gleamed in his eyes.
- Laughter gleamed in his eyes.
Word OriginOld English glǣm ‘brilliant light’, of Germanic origin.