GLAZE OVER vs GLASS: NOUN
- N/A
- The quantity contained by a drinking vessel; a glassful.
- A binocular or field glass.
- A pair of lenses mounted in a light frame, used to correct faulty vision or protect the eyes.
- The series of transparent plastic sheets that are secured vertically above the boards in many ice rinks.
- A window or windowpane.
- A barometer.
- A mirror.
- A drinking vessel.
- Something made of glass or other transparent or translucent material, especially.
- Any of a large class of materials with highly variable mechanical and optical properties that solidify from the molten state without crystallization, are typically made by silicates fusing with boric oxide, aluminum oxide, or phosphorus pentoxide, are generally hard, brittle, and transparent or translucent, and are considered to be supercooled liquids rather than true solids.
- Amphetamine used in the form of a crystalline hydrochloride; used as a stimulant to the nervous system and as an appetite suppressant
- A mirror; usually a ladies' dressing mirror
- A small refracting telescope
- A brittle transparent solid with irregular atomic structure
- The quantity a glass will hold
- Glassware collectively
- A glass container for holding liquids while drinking
- A hard, brittle, translucent, and commonly transparent substance, white or colored, having a conchoidal fracture, and made by fusing together sand or silica with lime, potash, soda, or lead oxide. It is used for window panes and mirrors, for articles of table and culinary use, for lenses, and various articles of ornament.
- A device, such as a monocle or spyglass, containing a lens or lenses and used as an aid to vision.
- A glass vessel filled with running sand for measuring time, called specifically an hour-glass; hence, the time in which a glass is exhausted of its sand; specifically (nautical), the time in which a half-hour glass is emptied of its sand.
- A vessel made of glass: as, a jelly-glass; a finger-glass. Especially—
- A drinking-vessel made of glass; hence, the quantity which such a vessel holds, and figuratively what one drinks, especially strong drink: as, fond of his glass.
- In petrography, glass is the natural product of the rapid cooling of igneous magmas, and in large masses is known as obsidian, pitchstone, and pumice. It may be colorless or of various colors, as white, yellow, orange, red, green, and black. It forms the ground-mass of many volcanic rocks, being sometimes recognizable by the unaided eye, but often only microscopically. Glass base to the name given to it when it forms the matrix for microscopic crystals in the ground-mass of a rock.
- An observing-instrument made of glass, or of which the main or most important part is of glass. A lens; a telescope; a field-glass. A barometer. A thermometer. An eye-glass: usually in the plural eye-glasses or spectacles.
- A plate, screen, vessel, instrument, etc., made of glass.
- A plate or pane of glass inserted in the frame of a window, picture, clock, hotbed, etc., to admit the light or permit a view, while excluding wind, rain, dust, or other interference.
- A substance resulting from the fusion of a combination of silica (rarely boracic acid) with various bases. See vitreous.
- A kind of glass which is quite colorless, hard, difficultly fusible, and less readily acted upon by chemicals than any other kind of glass. Mirrors are often made of it, and it is largely used for the manufacture of chemical apparatus. It is made from ground quartz, purified potash, and lime.
- A musical instrument consisting either of glass tubes or glass bowls, graduated in size, which can be played by the friction of the moistened finger. Also called glass harmonica.
- Glass made ornamental by the application of a white metallic film to the unexposed side, giving it a silvery luster.
- Less properly, same as enameled glass. See glass-painting.
- Glass that has been heated and then suddenly cooled, under the process of F. Siemens. When the articles to be made are such as are generally molded, the molten glass is run into suitable molds and squeezed while it is highly heated, the mold cooling it sufficiently without the liquid bath.
- A looking-glass; a mirror. It was formerly fashionable for ladies to carry a looking-glass hanging from the girdle.
- Objects made of glass; glassware.
- Glass having a lime base instead of a lead base, in this sense including nearly all the ornamental glassware, vessels, etc., of the best periods and styles, Venetian Spanish, and others.
GLAZE OVER vs GLASS: ADJECTIVE
- N/A
- Made or consisting of glass.
- Fitted with panes of glass; glazed.
GLAZE OVER vs GLASS: VERB
- (of eyes) to become unfocused, as if through boredom
- To gloss over
- Become glassy; lose clear vision
- Become glassy or take on a glass-like appearance
- Scan (game in the forest) with binoculars
- Furnish with glass
- Enclose with glass
- Put in a glass container
- Become glassy or take on a glass-like appearance
GLAZE OVER vs GLASS: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To enclose or encase with glass.
- To provide with glass or glass parts.
- To make glassy; glaze.
- To see reflected, as in a mirror.
- To reflect.
- To scan (a tract of land or forest, for example) with an optical instrument.
- To become glassy.
- To use an optical instrument, as in looking for game.
- To put into a glass container.
GLAZE OVER vs GLASS: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To smooth or polish anything, as leater, by rubbing it with a glass burnisher.
- To reflect, as in a mirror; to mirror; -- used reflexively.
- To case in glass.
- To cover or furnish with glass; to glaze.
GLAZE OVER vs GLASS: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Lose clear vision
- Become glassy
- To make glassy; give a glazed surface to; glaze or polish.
- To case in glass; cover with or as if with glass; protect by a covering of glass.
- [Attrib. use of the noun. The older adj. is glazen, q. v.] Made of glass; vitreous: as, a glass bottle.—
- An amphetamine derivative (trade name Methedrine) used in the form of a crystalline hydrochloride
- To reflect, as a mirror or other reflecting surface; show or observe a reflection of.
- Usually a ladies' dressing mirror
GLAZE OVER vs GLASS: RELATED WORDS
- Oscitant, Crestfallen, Stare, Mumpish, Unfocused, Lagophthalmia, Bleary, Downlooked, Emotionlessness, Expressionless, Glass over, Film over, Blur, Glass, Glaze
- Panes, Glazing, Tumbler, Goblet, Pane, Glassware, Bottle, Glass over, Field glass, Glass in, Drinking glass, Glaze over, Looking glass, Spyglass, Glaze
GLAZE OVER vs GLASS: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Scowl, Downcast, Oscitant, Crestfallen, Stare, Mumpish, Unfocused, Lagophthalmia, Bleary, Downlooked, Emotionlessness, Expressionless, Blur, Glass, Glaze
- Crystal, Windscreen, Wall, Window, Vase, Windshield, Tumbler, Goblet, Pane, Glassware, Bottle, Glaze over, Glass in, Field glass, Glaze
GLAZE OVER vs GLASS: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Place rested turkey breast onto a platter and pour glaze over top.
- The glaze over his pale blue eyes was probably cataract.
- Chocolate brown with a white lava glaze over it.
- Does this make your eyes glaze over as well?
- Biddle and bank crisis make my eyes glaze over.
- Skip ahead if your eyes start to glaze over.
- When people see numbers, their eyes glaze over.
- Most eyes simply glaze over at these words.
- General Finishes Van Dyke Brown glaze over it.
- Drizzle the glaze over the cooled cake, let the glaze set for a few minutes, and serve.
- For items with glass, apply glass cleaners on some cotton cloth or microfibers.
- Upcycled wooden ladders, glass refrigerator door, glass shelving, red oak and hardware.
- Top is mostly glass with glass shelves and lighting system.
- Strands of glass or glass mats are impregnated with resins.
- Tempered or Toughened glass screen protector is kind of thin glass which is used to protect the Gorilla Glass of your phone from breaking.
- Kitchen Table and Leather Chairs Glass Get black glass table set for small Glass tables Argos!
- Whether that be a Table Top, Kitchen Splashback, Shower Screen, Glass Balustrade, Stair Glass or Glass Partition Panels.
- This lovely glass bird cafe is made from hand blown glass by glass artist Stephen Kitras.
- Glass, Lexan, Wireglass, Fire Rated Glass, Bullet Resistant Glass, and much more.
- Vintage Windshield Glass, Back Glass, Door Glass, Vent Window Glass and Quarter Window Glass.
GLAZE OVER vs GLASS: QUESTIONS
- How to use Valspar antiquing glaze over chalk paint?
- Why are glass bottles not recycled into glass jars?
- Is hand blown glass more expensive than machined glass?
- Can you substitute other glass for fire rated glass?
- What is the meaning of glass looking through glass?
- What is the signature for glass in Scandinavian glass?
- Is tempered glass a lot thicker than regular glass?
- Is sapphire glass harder to scratch than Gorilla Glass?
- Why choose Westside glass and mirrors for glass splashbacks?
- How is laminated glass used to keep glass together?
- Why choose ACCU-glass's glass tube forming process?