Dictionary
Thesaurus
Reference
Translate
Web
Gleamed - 2 dictionary results

gleam

[gleem]
–noun
1. a flash or beam of light: the gleam of a lantern in the dark.
2. a dim or subdued light.
3. a brief or slight manifestation or occurrence; trace: a gleam of hope.
–verb (used without object)
4. to send forth a gleam or gleams.
5. to appear suddenly and clearly like a flash of light.

Origin:
bef. 1000; (n.) ME glem(e), OE glǣm; c. OHG gleimo glowworm; akin to OS glīmo brightness; (v.) ME, deriv. of the n. See glimmer, glimpse


gleam⋅ing⋅ly, adverb
gleamless, adjective


1. Gleam, glimmer, beam, ray are terms for a stream of light. Gleam denotes a not very brilliant, intermittent or nondirectional stream of light. Glimmer indicates a nondirectional light that is feeble and unsteady: a faint glimmer of moonlight. Beam usually means a directional, and therefore smaller, stream: the beam from a searchlight. Ray usually implies a still smaller amount of light than a beam, a single line of light: a ray through a pinprick in a window shade. 4. shine, glimmer, flash, glitter, sparkle, beam.
gleam   (glēm)   
n.  
  1. A brief beam or flash of light: saw gleams of daylight through the cracks.
  2. A steady but subdued shining; a glow: the gleam of burnished gold.
  3. A brief or dim indication; a trace: a gleam of intelligence.
v.   gleamed, gleam·ing, gleams
  1. To emit a gleam; flash or glow: "Their tile roofs gleamed in the moon's pallid radiance" (Laura Joh Rowland). See Synonyms at flash.
  2. To be reflected as a gleam: The sun gleamed on the water.
  3. To be manifested or indicated briefly or faintly.

[Middle English glem, from Old English glǣm; see ghel-2 in Indo-European roots.]
gleam'er n.
Search another word or see Gleamed on Thesaurus | Reference