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
Still haven’t found your answers?
Write down your questions and let the native speakers help you!