Sentence examples for glazing at from inspiring English sources

The phrase "glazing at" is not correct in standard written English; it seems to be a typographical error or a misinterpretation of "gazing at." You can use "gazing at" when describing the act of looking steadily and intently at something, often with admiration or wonder.

Example: "She was gazing at the stars, lost in thought."
Alternatives: "staring at" or "looking at."

Exact(6)

"I was watching that music channel, MTV," he recalls, his eyes glazing at the memory, "and what I liked about it was that they showed, you know, videos".

Last week, at Insite11 at the BRE's Garston headquarters, contractor Willmott Dixon unveiled transparent photovoltaic architectural roof glazing at its Community Healthcare Campus at the BRE Innovation Park.

Although concrete collectors without glazing at the top are less efficient they can provide moderate hot water to meet the various requirements of the building during the day.

The window was consisted of three layers, including one layer of clear glazing at the outside, one layer of insulated glazing unit at the inside, and one layer of water flowing in between.

It would have required laying off a member of staff from what was a small organisation to pay just for the window-cleaning bills for its extensive and hard-to-reach glazing; at the same time the administrative offices were given no views of the outside.

Due to the transparent glazing at light tube base the sunbeams illuminate the interior working plane or floor with circular bands.

Similar(54)

If Dr. Giggles ever took the Hippocratic Oath, his eyes must have glazed at the "abstain from doing harm" part.

A hair glaze at least once a month is essential, he said, especially for men (who he said request it more than women) because it seals cuticles, making gray hairs at the temples appear brighter and thicker.

The large triple lancet to the nave west end was glazed at the expense of Dean Creighton at a cost of £140 in 1664.

Third week: the realization that one's eyes are glazing over at the sight of photos of naked men, who all begin to look the same.

Every time you stop your eyes glazing over at yet another picture of the offspring of one of your colleagues you are essentially screaming aloud: "Look, we are all trapped in this building for five days out of every seven!

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