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"glower" Definitions
  1. the act of looking at somebody/something in an angry, aggressive way

72 Sentences With "glower"

How to use glower in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "glower" and check conjugation/comparative form for "glower". Mastering all the usages of "glower" from sentence examples published by news publications.

As "his anger fiercely flamed," she blossomed under his glower.
How can so many varied characters all have the same glower?
His eyes are dark brown chestnuts that glower passionately whenever he discusses weaponry.
The Republican man of the hour Is a wellspring of bluster and glower.
Does Thanos even do anything besides glower menacingly while holding up his one glove?
They are perfectly happy being fooled by his gruff glower, his shit-eating grin.
Every time I pass by them, I glower out of nothing but old habit.
She can imbue an irritated glower with determination, pain, and comic effect all at once.
He is eclipsed by the sulfuric glower of Conkling and the shining personality of Garfield.
Vincent Cassel as his nemesis, known only as "The Asset," is a matching stone-faced glower.
Images of the tycoon glower from walls plastered with covers of Playboy, GQ, Newsweek and more.
A bonus: Some Marvel superheroes can't help but constantly glower, Peggy does it all with a smile.
Trump interrupted Clinton repeatedly during the debate, and often appeared to glower with resentment as she spoke.
As it is, they're all mostly there to glower and worry about what they stand to lose.
A self-taught taxidermist, he stuffed the eagle owl, sparrow hawk and grouse that glower down on his guests.
Mel is drawn deftly, lightly; Bors is a barrel-chested Cro-Magnon with a bald skull and angry glower.
But they "glower and intone dialogue like 'I assured the elders we'd have the apple for London,'" Mr. Kenny added.
He and his friends would sit at a table in the dining hall and glower and generally be unpleasant human beings.
Humans can make eye contact with fellow drivers, wave at pedestrians, glower at cyclists, and otherwise shout and gesticulate to their hearts' content.
Manson gave his signature glower (he has appearances to maintain, after all) but Swift, 29, looked unabashedly thrilled to be in his presence.
Imagine the kind of place where angry men owe angrier men money, where angel-winged women strip on stage or glower from kitchen tables.
Trump loomed over the viewer, his face in a jowly glower, his hair darker than it is now, the metallic auburn of a new penny.
Meanwhile, the eyes in between are capable of widening in pure glee or narrowing into a coy, sinister glower, depending on what's asked of them.
He is understood to be a loner, a constant if not deep thinker with a resting glower and restless hair and an incapacity for niceties.
From America's Little Diomede Island, which is indeed very little, you can cheerily wave or glower, depending on your attitude, at Russia's Big Diomede Island.
Glower over a campfire at night, the flicking light reflecting off your face as you contemplate the night when your honor was taken from you forever.
In 2017 the number of cars entering America from Canada dipped, even though the Canadian dollar strengthened, a sign that Mr Trump's glower was putting off some.
But I venture to say you'd be hard-pressed to put this book down, crawl back into your Grinch cave, and glower at the warm-hearted Whos.
Douglas Penn-of-Chaffee seemed to glower disapprovingly at Bernie; Gavin was convinced that Bernie was aware of this effect and sat there specifically to cause it.
Elba is underserved by a role that mostly just requires him to glower, though he does take on a note of unexpected tragedy late in the movie.
He narrowed his eyes and seemed to glower at his rival, but he made a point, at first, of calling her "Secretary Clinton" (not his preferred moniker, "Crooked Hillary").
You could "consider" NPCs to judge their opinion of you, and most of them would "glower at you dubiously" until you did something to improve your station with their ilk.
While Ms. Pelosi gave a short speech at the breakfast on behalf of the poor and persecuted, Mr. Trump seemed to glower and stared straight ahead, not looking at her.
In any event, Ethiopia is likely to oppose anything Eritrea supports: the two countries' armies still glower at each other across a disputed border, though full-scale fighting ceased in 2000.
President Trump takes pains to glower at the camera, boasts about the size of his hands (and not just his hands) and recently tweeted a mock video of himself wrestling CNN.
But even before that film, there was Hugh Jackman's Wolverine in the X-movies, setting a standard for superheroes in 2000's X-Men with his peacetime glower and his wartime snarl.
Farrell is a potentially worthy villain, but he has nothing much to do more than glower and, in the climax, give way to a much more famous, but far less enjoyable, movie star.
A few politicians are peeved—particularly about one character's comments on Rajiv Gandhi's government in the 1980s—but that has probably only drawn more attention to the billboards from which Sartaj and Gaitonde glower.
The fluctuating history and personality is nothing new for the character, but there is a stark contrast between his mute glower in his other big-screen incarnation, and his nonstop chatter in this one.
The film doesn't have Deadpool's smarmy humor, but it operates at a similar revved-up speed, and it lightens up considerably from the grimdark jaw-clenching glower-offs of Man Of Steel and Batman v Superman.
The shooting, with Mr. Oswald's pained grimace and Detective Leavelle's stricken glower, was chillingly captured by Robert H. Jackson of The Dallas Times Herald in an iconic photograph that won the Pulitzer Prize the following year.
The shooting, with Mr. Oswald's pained grimace and Detective Leavelle's stricken glower, was chillingly captured by Robert H. Jackson of The Dallas Times Herald in an iconic photograph that won the Pulitzer Prize the following year.
The former Doogie Howser knows how to expertly milk a laugh from a mugging glower, a sarcasm-tinged line reading, or an extended bit of physical comedy (there's some especially funny work with O'Hara in this regard).
Past presidents, bomber jackets on, went to the demilitarised zone to glower across the world's most dangerous faultline, as did Mr Trump's own vice-president, Mike Pence, saying he wanted the North Koreans "to see the resolve in my face".
Did you see Sapp glower like a professional wrestler and take his shirt off and gently toss it at Akebono's midsection like he was aiming for a laundry hamper, and did you witness Akebono taking off his shirt in response?
The set was a living organism, emitting turmoil and images of chaos: when an old piano was played, its discordancy seemed to echo through the language; when Cumberbatch, as Hamlet, feigned madness, or became mad, the portraits on the walls seemed to glower at him.
The White Walkers were conspicuous by their absence in the first Season 7 trailer, but they're back with a vengeance in the new promo, which sees Jon Snow and his wrecking crew battling the wights, while the rest of Westeros' inhabitants glower ominously at each other.
Jonathan Fredrickson and Julie Shanahan glower and bicker incessantly on a chaise longue; Breanna O'Mara giggles and apologizes; Oleg Stepanov dances, entranced, to a jukebox tune; Julian Stierle keeps reappearing, a Banquo phantom at windows with one finger in the air, testing the winds of change.
In the summer of 2016, she arrived in Colorado Springs for one of U.S. Figure Skating's regular monitoring sessions for elite skaters — something of a training camp, if you will — with an extra 20 pounds on her 5-foot-5 frame and a glower almost perpetually on her face.
Would that we could all react to our co-workers and enemies by shoving them onto the ground, gaining a pall of malevolence and genuine danger as you glower over your opponent, lurching forward while people around you try to hold you back, to keep you safe from your own anger.
We see that Miller grows up on one of those Elysian Californian streets, similar to the kids of Transparent, 20th Century Women, and Palo Alto—each a more recent narrative centered on youth and its discontents where teens romp about the suburbs, glower against authority and responsibilities, and trade their innocence for kicks.
The kiddie sociopath with the thousand-yard glower may be somewhat too easy a go-to in thrillers, but anyone who grew up on mass-market paperbacks for which the cover art was some forbidding version of a blood-spattered, blankly staring broken doll will feel an almost nostalgic connection to this novel.
I was 12, my parents were loyal Democrats, and every night we'd watch the news, cheer for whatever Bill Clinton was saying on the trail, and then glower at the screen when Peter Jennings went to Brit Hume, then the White House correspondent, for an update on what the incumbent president was up to.
Even though he isn't playing the same game as the straight adaptations, next to to Joe Wright's luminous, Oscar-nominated 2005 version of Pride And Prejudice, the 1940 version starring Laurence Olivier and Greer Garson, and the 1995 BBC miniseries version in which Colin Firth redefined "glower," P&P&Z feels comparatively cheap and minor.
Her books and current published series include the Princess series, the Dragonskin Slippers series, and the Castle Glower series, as well as the stand-alone book Sun and Moon, Ice and Snow.Search list. Google Books. Retrieved January 2, 2012.
Michael Toland of The Austin Chronicle wrote that the record collects "post-punk's angular chords, synth-pop's buzzing colors, No Wave's brash indifference, and goth's pessimistic glower." Its follow-up, 2018's 3 EP, showcased further embracement of electronics while introducing elements from EBM and darkwave.
The Château was owned by Sir Philip Glower, a colonel of the English army and the heir of Elizabeth Pierrepont, Duchess of Kingston-upon-Hull. In February 1791 he married Françoise-Aimée Magallon d'Amirail, daughter of a Santo Domingo planter, in the chapel of Saint-Assise. That year he purchased the château and its estate from Glower, who wanted to liquidate his French possessions due to the political uncertainty. He began selling off parts of the estate. Caroillon-Destillières's position became dangerous after the uprising of 1792. In 1793 he was imprisoned, but with the end of the Reign of Terror after 9 Thermidor (27 July 1794) he avoided the guillotine, and some time later was released.
Later, a cross slide stage was used for this purpose. Vogt introduced Koehler illumination, and the reddish Nernst glower was replaced with the brighter and whiter incandescent lamp. Special mention should be paid to the experiments that followed Henker's improvements in 1919. On his improvements the Nitra lamp was replaced with a carbon arc lamp with a liquid filter.
Deadsy was mastered by Howie Weinberg at Masterdisk in Peekskill, New York. Deadsy's original content varies greatly from the selection of songs that later appeared on Commencement. Only five of the nine songs from Deadsy appear on Commencement: "Lake Waramaug", "The Elements", "Flowing Glower", "Future Years" and "Cruella". These were heavily re-mixed and partly re-recorded for their eventual use on Commencement.
Nernst lamp, complete, model B with cloche, DC-lamp 0.5 ampere, 95 volts, by courtesy of Landesmuseum für Technik und Arbeit in Mannheim, Germany, (Engl.: State Museum of Technology and Labour, Mannheim) A Nernst lamp diagram from 1903. The light-emitting ceramic filament is called a "glower" The Nernst lamp was an early form of incandescent lamp. Nernst lamps did not use a glowing tungsten filament.
Serba praised the actor's performance, writing: "He delivers the heft with a deeply furrowed glower, and we feel it in our marrow." Scott Snowden of Space.com described Herzog as "magnificent" in delivering the Client's monologues. /Film writer Ethan Anderton said Herzog "makes the perfect crime boss" and has a "unique cadence and screen presence" which made him a good fit for The Mandalorian, which sought to explore a darker side of Star Wars.
It made him seem dangerous. He was known for > his villains, and it was the complexity of these characters, their emotional > and psychological kinks, that elevated even his lesser roles. He never > achieved the supernova stardom of a Gable or Bogart, and these days Ryan's > glower may be more familiar than his name. Yet he was the type of next-level > star and B-movie stalwart that helped make old Hollywood great.
The base was able to move freely on a glass plate. The illuminator employed a Nernst glower which was later converted into a slit through a simple optical system."Eye Examination with the Slit Lamp", Zeiss, p. 35 However, the instrument never received much attention and the term "slit lamp" did not appear in any literature again until 1914. It wasn't until 1919 that several improvements were made to the Gullstrand slit lamp made by Vogt Henker.
The property that became Starr's Mill was owned by Hananiah Gilcoat who built the first mill here before his death in 1825. This site, on Whitewater Creek south of Fayetteville, was less than a mile from the boundary between Creek Indian lands and the State of Georgia. Hilliard Starr, who owned the mill from 1866 until 1879, gave the site its current name. After the first two log structures burned, William T. Glower built the current building in 1907.
Langmuir attended several schools and institutes in America and Paris (1892–1895) before graduating high school from Chestnut Hill Academy (1898), an elite private school located in the affluent Chestnut Hill area in Philadelphia. He graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree in metallurgical engineering (Met.E.) from the Columbia University School of Mines in 1903. He earned his PhD in 1906 under Friedrich Dolezalek in Göttingen, for research done using the "Nernst glower", an electric lamp invented by Nernst.
Bamburgh parish records of baptisms for 1768 show this hamlet with the name of Gloweroerum. The name is claimed to come from old English to 'Glower o'er them' or to look over them. This is believed to be due to the fact that there was an old fort on the site of the farm which looked over Bamburgh Castle whilst it was seat to the king of Northumberland. Prior to re-development in 2010-2012 there were substantial farm buildings on the crossroads.
There are four known sports: the climber 'Climbing Souvenir de la Malmaison' (Bennett, 1893), the pink form 'Leweson Glower' (Béluze, 1845), the white sport 'Kronprinzessin Viktoria' (Volvert, 1887), named after the oldest daughter (1840–1901) of Queen Victoria, and 'Souvenir de St Anne's' (Hilling, 1950), a semi-double white rose with yellow stamens that had originated in a garden at St Anne's, Clontarf, Dublin. One of the most famous descendants of 'Souvenir de la Malmaison' is 'Gloire de Dijon' (Jacotot, 1850).
Sydney Tower is Sydney's tallest structure and the second tallest observation tower in the Southern Hemisphere. The name Sydney Tower has become common in daily usage; however, the tower has been known as the Sydney Tower Eye, AMP Tower, Flower Tower, Glower Tower, Westfield Centrepoint Tower, Big Poke, Centrepoint Tower or just Centrepoint. The Sydney Tower is a member of the World Federation of Great Towers. The tower stands above the Sydney central business district (CBD), located on Market Street, between Pitt and Castlereagh Streets.
Russell was known for his distinctive high-pitched laugh (hear at ) of which Auerbach quipped, "There are only two things that could make me quit coaching[:] My wife and Russell's laugh." To teammates and friends, Russell was open and amicable, but was extremely distrusting and cold towards anyone else. Journalists were often treated to the "Russell Glower", described as an "icily contemptuous stare accompanied by a long silence". Russell was also notorious for his refusal to give autographs or even acknowledge the Celtics fans, and was called "the most selfish, surly and uncooperative athlete" by one pundit.
His new book The Voodoo Murders, a fiction murder mystery based on the events of the first game, is now a best-seller. The people of Rittersberg, the seat of the Schattenjägers, ask for Gabriel's help when there is talk of a werewolf attack in Munich. Gabriel investigates and Grace comes to Germany to help him, determined to fight evil alongside the Schattenjäger and now experiencing visions and dreams of her own. Gabriel develops an unusual friendship with Baron Friedrich Von Glower, who leads an exclusive hunting club in Munich and believes Knight is a kindred spirit.
This greenish-black ore had previously only been found in small amounts in Russia and Norway. Because of its economic potential as a material for light filaments, both Thomas Edison and George Westinghouse attempted to obtain the hill, with the Piedmont Mining Company, which was owned by Edison, winning out in 1889. In 1903, German chemist Walther Nernst, who later became famous for discovering the Third Law of Thermodynamics, was working for Westinghouse when he developed a street light that used raw gadolinite as a filament. The mineral species rich in yttrium-erbium were more particularly sought after because thorium and uranium were not used in the "glower" of the Nernst lamp.
According to political analyst James Fallows in The Atlantic (based on a "note from someone with many decades' experience in national politics"), bipartisanship is a phenomenon belonging to a two-party system such as the political system of the United States and does not apply to a parliamentary system (such as Great Britain) since the minority party is not involved in helping write legislation or voting for it. Fallows argues that in a two-party system, the minority party can be obstructionist and thwart the actions of the majority party. However, analyst Anne Applebaum in The Washington Post suggested that partisanship had been rampant in the United Kingdom and described it as "a country in which the government and the opposition glower at each other from opposite sides of the House of Commons, in which backbenchers jeer when their opponents speak." Applebaum suggested there was bipartisanship in Britain, meaning a coalition in 2010 between the opposing major parties but that it remained to be seen whether the coalition could stay together to solve serious problems such as tackling Britain's financial crisis.

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