Use "glares" in a sentence

1. Screechings and warlock Bellyachings and maniacal seed-saving and long, intense glares

2. Synonyms for Brightnesses include brilliances, radiances, effulgences, luminosities, refulgences, brilliancies, candours, candors, dazzles and glares

3. Sea Bonze Massive and blacker than the darkest depths of the sea, this colossal watery form glares with two immense, hate-filled eyes

4. 26 The vainglorious presence of Marilyn Monroe is placed alongside the subdued countenance of Mother Theresa, Che Guevara glares vehemently in opposition to the pacifistic visage of Mahatma Gandhi.

5. 7 It looks to me as if it would be happier in New York - it's trying its damnedest to be a skyscraper, and its stark white stone glares balefully .

6. Using various colored pencils I created lines of different lengths and Boldnesses to convey the depth of the wood grain, as well as marks to capture shadows and glares in the metal.

7. Forget the blizzard that Besieges the cozy guesthouse in Agatha Christie's "The Mousetrap": In the production of the iconic play running at 1st Stage, in Northern Virginia, the icy glares of Mrs

8. The flesh Thou madest smooth These Carked and fretted, that it seemed to run With ulcers; and the daylight of thy sun They parcelled into blots and glares, uncouth With stagnant grouts of paint

9. ‘He once remarked Balefully that ‘in England I am too much an American, and in America, too much an Englishman.’’ ‘It is such a retro settlement that the working men's club glares Balefully across Main Street at the Conservative club, like the post-industrial revolution never happened.’

10. Finally, unable to face the Baleful glares of his junior colleagues any longer, Livingstone gave in last week and paid his staff their overdue February salaries "Which of you two low-life sleazeballs killed Murdoch?" There was no answer, only Baleful stares most people have experiences in infancy which made them feel weak, insignificant, foolish, ignorant, dirty, unloved.

11. ‘Aristotle said Irony better befits a gentleman than Buffoonery; the ironical man jokes to amuse himself, the buffoon to amuse other people.’ ‘Many a batsman has already paid the penalty for believing that Kirby's glares and stares were mere Buffoonery only then to find a stump ripped out by a great delivery or an edged shot finishing up