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Maurizio
Glimmer vs shine vs gleam
can anybody explain to me the difference between the verbs to glimmer, to shine and to gleam? Thank you
Dec 27, 2017 4:42 PM
Answers · 4
1
Not easy!
Glimmer: intermittent, weaker light (used more often to describe an idea - "a glimmer of hope")
Shine: steady reflection
Gleam: Intense steady reflection (shine +)
and a bonus word to confuse things even more:
Glisten: softly reflect light, often wet
Mario's brand new Fiat gleamed! The tires glistened and the red paint shined brightly in the sun.
December 27, 2017
1
Shine can mean "reflect brightly," as in a shiny glass or metal object. it can also mean that the subject is a light source (the light bulb shined brightly in the window). Gleam I think of as mainly a word referring to reflective surfaces, like metal or a clean floor as the previous answer mentioned. Glimmer has a sense of flickering or movement, and also has a connotation of a small or dim light, like a gold coin might glimmer at the bottom of a dark pool of water.
December 27, 2017
That's a tricky one! Personally, I would say:
shine = something like metal, reflective surface. "The stainless steel shines in the light."
glimmer = makes me think of glitter
..but this isn't a verb I would use ever. The only thing I can think of is like a firefly that has a weaker light, "The firefly's light glimmered in the night sky."
gleam = also a verb I don't use much, but you might say "The floor was gleaming, it was so clean!"
December 27, 2017
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Maurizio
Language Skills
Dutch, English, German, Italian, Spanish
Learning Language
Spanish
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