Meaning
“Glare at” means to look at someone or something in an angry, fierce, or unpleasant way. It suggests strong disapproval, hostility, or irritation expressed through eye contact.
Grammar and Usage
- Verb phrase: glare at
- Structure: glare at + object
- Transitive (requires an object).
- Used to describe aggressive or angry eye contact.
Example structure:
-
subject + glare at + object
- She glared at him angrily.
Common Phrases
- glare at someone in silence
- glare at the screen
- glare at the mistake
Collocations
- Adverbs + glare at: angrily glare at, coldly glare at, fiercely glare at
- Objects: glare at someone, glare at the driver, glare at the computer, glare at the mistake
Examples
- The teacher glared at the students who were talking during the lesson.
- She glared at him for interrupting her speech.
- He glared at the computer screen when it froze.
- The cat glared at the dog from the corner.
- They glared at each other without saying a word.
- She glared at her brother after he ate her dessert.
- He glared at the noisy neighbors.
- The coach glared at the players for not paying attention.
Synonyms or Related
- stare angrily at
- frown at
- scowl at
- glare (without at can also mean a strong light)
Antonym
- smile at
- beam at
- look kindly at