glare2 |
a smooth, glassy surface of or like ice. |
glaring |
blindingly bright. [4 definitions] |
glary |
harshly dazzling; glaring. |
glasnost |
an official Russian policy of openness and candor in social and political discussions. |
glass |
a hard, breakable, usu. transparent material made from silica and metallic oxides and used for windows, bottles, mirrors, and the like. [5 definitions] |
glass blowing |
the art or process of shaping glass by blowing air through a tube that holds a mass of molten glass at one end. |
glasses |
shortened form of "eyeglasses." |
glassful |
the quantity a glass can hold when full. |
glassine |
a thin, tough, nearly transparent paper used in packaging, as for book jackets and envelope windows. |
glassless |
combined form of glass. |
glass snake |
any of several limbless lizards of the southern United States or of Europe and Asia, having a tail that snaps or breaks off easily. |
glassware |
objects made of glass, esp. for a table setting. |
glass wool |
fibers of spun glass that resemble wool and are used in insulation and air filters. |
glasswort |
any of several fleshy plants that are found in salt marshes or the like, having succulent stems and scalelike leaves, the ash of which was formerly used in making glass. |
glassy |
having qualities of glass, such as smoothness, slipperiness, or transparency. [2 definitions] |
glaucoma |
a progressively disabling disease of the eye marked by increased pressure in and hardening of the eyeball. |
glaucous |
of or pertaining to a light bluish green color. [2 definitions] |
glaze |
to install glass in (a window). [9 definitions] |
glazier |
a person who is trained to install window glass. |
glazing |
the act of cutting and fitting glass in a window or the like. [3 definitions] |
gleam |
a slight, sudden, or brief flash or beam of light; glint. [5 definitions] |