Wink vs Glance - What's the difference?
wink | glance |
(obsolete) To close one's eyes.
* Shakespeare
* Tillotson
(archaic) To turn a blind eye.
*, New York Review of Books, 2001, p.51:
* Herbert
* John Locke
(intransitive) To blink with only one eye as a message, signal, or suggestion.
To twinkle.
To be dim and flicker.
To send an indication of agreement by winking.
An act of winking (a blinking of only one eye), or a message sent by winking.
A brief time; an instant.
A brief period of sleep; especially forty winks.
* 1919 ,
A disc used in the game of tiddlywinks.
To look briefly (at something).
* Shakespeare
To graze a surface.
To sparkle.
* Tennyson
To move quickly, appearing and disappearing rapidly; to be visible only for an instant at a time; to move interruptedly; to twinkle.
* Macaulay
To strike and fly off in an oblique direction; to dart aside.
* Shakespeare
* Milton
(soccer) To hit lightly with the head, make a deft header.
* {{quote-news
, year=2011
, date=January 18
, author=
, title=Wolverhampton 5 - 0 Doncaster
, work=BBC
To make an incidental or passing reflection; to allude; to hint; often with at .
* Shakespeare
* Jonathan Swift
A brief or cursory look.
* (William Shakespeare) (1564-1616)
* 1900 , , The House Behind the Cedars , Chapter I,
*{{quote-book, year=1959, author=(Georgette Heyer), title=(The Unknown Ajax), chapter=1
, passage=But Richmond, his grandfather's darling, after one thoughtful glance cast under his lashes at that uncompromising countenance appeared to lose himself in his own reflections.}}
A deflection.
(label) A stroke in which the ball is deflected to one side.
A sudden flash of light or splendour.
* (John Milton) (1608-1674)
An incidental or passing thought or allusion.
* (William Cowper) (1731-1800)
(label) Any of various sulphides, mostly dark-coloured, which have a brilliant metallic lustre.
(label) Glance coal.
As nouns the difference between wink and glance
is that wink is sign while glance is a brief or cursory look.As a verb glance is
to look briefly (at something).wink
English
Verb
(en verb)- I will wink , so shall the day seem night.
- They are not blind, but they wink .
- Some trot about to bear false witness, and say anything for money; and though judges know of it, yet for a bribe they wink at it, and suffer false contracts to prevail against equity.
- And yet, as though he knew it not, / His knowledge winks , and lets his humours reign.
- Obstinacy can not be winked at, but must be subdued.
- He winked at me.
- She winked her eye.
- The light winks .
Noun
(en noun)- I couldn't bear to leave him where he is. I shouldn't sleep a wink for thinking of him.
Derived terms
* nudge nudge wink wink * wink murderglance
English
Alternative forms
* glaunce (obsolete)Verb
(glanc)- She glanced at her reflection as she passed the mirror.
- The poet's eye, in a fine frenzy rolling, / Doth glance from heaven to earth, from earth to heaven.
- The spring sunlight was glancing on the water of the pond.
- From art, from nature, from the schools, / Let random influences glance , / Like light in many a shivered lance, / That breaks about the dappled pools.
- And all along the forum and up the sacred seat, / His vulture eye pursued the trip of those small glancing feet.
- Your arrow hath glanced .
- On me the curse aslope / Glanced on the ground.
citation, page= , passage=Doncaster paid the price two minutes later when Doyle sent Hunt away down the left and his pinpoint cross was glanced in by Fletcher for his sixth goal of the season. }}
- Wherein obscurely / Caesar's ambition shall be glanced at.
- He glanced at a certain reverend doctor.
Synonyms
* (To look briefly) glimpseDerived terms
* glance off * glance over * glance away * glanceableNoun
(en noun)- Dart not scornful glances from those eyes.
- Warwick left the undertaker's shop and retraced his steps until he had passed the lawyer's office, toward which he threw an affectionate glance .
- swift as the lightning glance
- How fleet is a glance of the mind.