Glint \Glint\ (gl[i^]nt), n. [OE. glent.] A glimpse, glance, or gleam. [Scot.] ``He saw a glint of light.'' --Ramsay.
Glint \Glint\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Glinted}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Glinting}.] [OE. glenten. Cf. {Glance}, v. i., {Glitter}, v. i.] To glance; to peep forth, as a flower from the bud; to glitter. --Burns.
Glint \Glint\, v. t. To glance; to turn; as, to glint the eye.
Mr. Joyce hunches over the fish scanner, while crewmen peer over the side for the silvery glint of herring.
And so I flew off to the Exumas, to the south-east of the capital. These islands announce themselves with the silver glint of a line of breakers and then you run along them, a 100-mile string of sandbars and spits of land set in a luxurious blue sea.
On "Sun," a koto gives a glint of Japanese musical tradition. In passages, the voices of Gramm and a choir including Merry Clayton and Siedah Garrett ascend in reverie like a sunrise.
"Oh, they simply kill me," she said with a wicked glint in her eye. "They couldn't understand the picture's success. `It had to be a freak.'
He's likely to remember the glint of light off the Statue of Liberty, the day-long dusk of Wall Street, the stomach-plunging elevator ride to the top of the World Trade Center and the breathtaking view from the top of the 110-story skyscraper.