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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
glimmer
I.noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a gleam/glimmer/flicker of amusement (=a small amount in someone's eyes or on someone’s face)
▪ He examined her face with a wry gleam of amusement.
a glimmer/ray of hope (=a little hope, or something that gives you a little hope)
▪ The new treatment gives patients a glimmer of hope.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
faint
▪ He looked across the sea: a faint glimmer of pale light was rising in the midnight-blue sky.
▪ On her face appeared the faint glimmer of a smile.
▪ There was a faint glimmer of light from her window; it was from the night-light which she kept burning.
▪ But through the murk there was a faint glimmer of light.
■ VERB
see
▪ Unhappily, she averted her head so that he could not see the glimmer of tears that smarted behind her eyelids.
▪ I began to see a tiny glimmer of light.
▪ He was beginning to see a glimmer of sense about this world.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ the glimmer of a candle
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A glimmer of lightning lit the window again, and the thunder could be heard, distant and muted.
▪ Clearly they have some way to go but they can still look back on 1989 with a glimmer of pride.
▪ From time to time the passages opened out into caverns, some so gigantic that the glimmer from the two spears was lost in them.
▪ He looked across the sea: a faint glimmer of pale light was rising in the midnight-blue sky.
▪ The latticework of branches reveals glimmers of a fading sky.
▪ There is a glimmer of a smile.
▪ Yet, relations with Washington are on an extremely sound basis and there is a glimmer of improvement with Seoul.
II.verb
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ A light glimmered at the end of the hall.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A faint blue glow was shining from the observation windows and glimmering inside the open airlock.
▪ But now a meaningful benign world, the source of my dreams, glimmers briefly.
▪ Like a thousand insect-eyes glimmering in shadow, they are watching you.
▪ Outside, the streets glimmered morbidly.
▪ Ribbons of light spoked across the alley, glimmering through the interstices of an unfurled bamboo blind stretched across an entrance.
▪ The house glimmered through the trees, blazed against the black salt grass, the royal-blue evening sky.
▪ The water settled there for a second, glimmering.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
glimmer

Mica \Mi"ca\, n. [L. mica crumb, grain, particle; cf. F. mica.] (Min.) The name of a group of minerals characterized by highly perfect cleavage, so that they readily separate into very thin leaves, more or less elastic. They differ widely in composition, and vary in color from pale brown or yellow to green or black. The transparent forms are used in lanterns, the doors of stoves, etc., being popularly called isinglass. Formerly called also cat-silver, and glimmer.

Note: The important species of the mica group are: muscovite, common or potash mica, pale brown or green, often silvery, including damourite (also called hydromica and muscovy glass); biotite, iron-magnesia mica, dark brown, green, or black; lepidomelane, iron, mica, black; phlogopite, magnesia mica, colorless, yellow, brown; lepidolite, lithia mica, rose-red, lilac. [1913 Webster] Mica (usually muscovite, also biotite) is an essential constituent of granite, gneiss, and mica slate; biotite is common in many eruptive rocks; phlogopite in crystalline limestone and serpentine.

Mica diorite (Min.), an eruptive rock allied to diorite but containing mica (biotite) instead of hornblende.

Mica powder, a kind of dynamite containing fine scales of mica.

Mica schist, Mica slate (Geol.), a schistose rock, consisting of mica and quartz with, usually, some feldspar.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
glimmer

early 14c., "shine brightly," a frequentative from Proto-Germanic *glim-, root of Old English glæm "brightness" (see gleam (n.)). Sense shifted 15c. to "shine faintly." Compare Dutch glimmeren, German glimmeren "to shine dimly." Related: Glimmered; glimmering.

glimmer

1580s, from glimmer (v.).

Wiktionary
glimmer

n. 1 A faint light; a dim glow. 2 A flash of light. 3 A faint or remote possibility. 4 (context mineralogy dated English) mica vb. (context intransitive English) To shine with a faint unsteady light.

WordNet
glimmer
  1. n. a flash of light (especially reflected light) [syn: gleam, gleaming]

  2. a slight suggestion or vague understanding; "he had no inkling what was about to happen" [syn: inkling, intimation, glimmering]

  3. v. shine brightly, like a star or a light [syn: gleam]

Wikipedia
Glimmer

Glimmer may refer to:

  • GLIMMER, a gene prediction software package
Glimmer (Delerium song)

"Glimmer" is the first Delerium single of their 2015 compilation album Rarities & B-sides featuring vocals by Emily Haines of the band Metric. Glimmer was recorded at the Chimera recording session in 2005 with Carmen Rizzo und Jamie Muhoberac.

Bill Leeb said about the song: "Glimmer reads a bit like a Hollywood mystery having been lost for years, has resurfaced by happenstance. When our music engineer and mixer, Greg Reely, was pilfering through some recordings, he stumbled upon this song that features Emily Haines of Metric."

Remixes were done by Emjae and Stereojackers vs Mark Loverush.

Usage examples of "glimmer".

That quest was abetted by a sympathetic schoolteacher, Rebecca, who saw in the lad a glimmering hope that occasionally there might be resurrection from a bitter life sentence in the emotionally barren and aesthetically vitiated Kentucky hamlet, and who ultimately seduced him.

Ivy round her glimmering ancle, Vine about her glowing brow, Never sure was bride so beauteous, Daphne, chosen nymph, as thou!

Beneath it the city dropped away in walls, roofs, archaistic chimneys and lamplit streets, goblin lights of human-piloted vehicles, to the harbor, the sweep of Venture Bay, ships bound to and from the Sunward Islands and remoter regions of the Boreal Ocean, which glimmered like mercury in the afterglow of Charlemagne.

Sometimes her glimmer rises in the twilight, but it is in the black night of revolutions and of wars that her resplendence blazes forth, and her aurorean dawn becomes the Aurora Borealis.

Its light glimmered on the river and on the wings of carrion fowl awheel overhead.

In the soldier remark, we have an early glimmer of what, in the due course of time, became clear: Barbet was something of a wack.

I forget I am but a barbarian, whereas you, fair damsel, are a noble Byzantine, and I am not fit but to bow as a bondslave before your glimmering slippers.

For myself--I was one of the tenants--I would far prefer living in a workhouse to inhabiting those low-pitched oak-panelled rooms, and I would sooner look from my garret windows on to the squalor and grime of Whitechapel than from the diamond-shaped and leaded panes of the Manor of Trevor Major on to the boskage of its cool thickets, and the glimmering of its clear chalk streams where the quick trout glance among the waving water-weeds and over the chalk and gravel of its sliding rapids.

A scale byrnie glimmered faintly in the darkness beneath the forest roof.

Midsummer, as I was fishing and watching the glimmer chafers in the great fishpool above our moat, with Rosamond and our loved Jacinth by my side, that a rider appeared before the drawbridge, charged with a message from King Edward, commanding me to attend him forthwith at Malvern Magna, whither he had journeyed accompanied by his Queen, his son the Prince of Wales, and the Princess Elizabeth.

On the third night Yulba appeared out of the trunk of a cedar tree, and after him he hauled a loose, glimmering, almost-silky bundle, that clanked and clacketed as it came.

The faint glow of hidden tights played over rocks and crystals culled from diverse planetary systems, here reflecting from a blue-green amorphous mineral, there glimmering through a clear yellow decahedron.

The sky was full of dodecahedral frameworks, triangular faces glimmering, drifting like angular soap bubbles.

He sang me a song then, out there on deck in the darkness, barely voicing the words, a glimmer of Ireland and Scotland and even Shakespeare in his accent, and I don't think he even knew he was singing aloud.

While he paced the room with thoughtful steps, and Madame Montoni sat silently on a couch, at the upper end of it, waiting till the servant returned, Emily was observing the singular solemnity and desolation of the apartment, viewed, as it now was, by the glimmer of the single lamp, placed near a large Venetian mirror, that duskily reflected the scene, with the tall figure of Montoni passing slowly along, his arms folded, and his countenance shaded by the plume, that waved in his hat.