Saturday, November 15, 2014

to glare vs to stare vs to glance vs to glimpse

TO GLARE /glɛər/ [intransitive] = to look angrily at someone for a long time.

• “You have to learn how to cook!” My father in law tells me every time we sit down at the table. “I know how to cook. I don’t like it. He likes it. He can do it.” I gesture to my Italian husband. This inspires the dad to roll his eyes and glare at me for the rest of the meal.

Baby Glaring at Mother




TO STARE /stɛər/ [intransitive] = to look at something or someone for a long time without moving your eyes, for example because you are surprised, angry, or bored. [= to gaze]

• I try to motivate my husband to help her mother more, but he just stares blankly at me, grunts, makes weird hand gestures I can’t understand and stays attached to the couch.
• When we had dinner at Ciro's, it took a long while to get the waitresses attention as they seemed to be staring off into space the majority of the time.
• Does everyone stare this way at you? I only look this way at you. [Police]
• Is it proper to stare at a pretty girl?



TO GAZE /ɡeɪz/ [intransitive] = to look at someone or something for a long time, giving it all your attention.

• I was sitting at the window above the left wing, gazing into the waning crescent moon, when we heard the sound of an explosion from the engine underneath.



TO GLANCE /glæns/ [intransitive] = to quickly look at someone or something.

• Even if you have experience with a variety of programming languages, normal Perl may seem quite odd at first glance because its syntax is very compact and its semantics thick.


A woman glancing over her shoulder




GLIMPSE (noun) =
1) a quick look at someone or something that does not allow you to see them clearly.
2) a short experience of something that helps you begin to understand it

• NASA has given the world another glimpse of its revolutionary flying saucer technology for future Mars missions.
• To have few glimpses of subject matter read the first chapter of the book by Jeffrey E. F. Friedl.



TO PEEK /pik/ [intransitive] = to look quickly at something, or to look at something from behind something else, especially something that you are not supposed to see. [= peep, or peer]

• Carefully he peeked through the glass window in the door.
• Top Ten Newcomers for 2012: A peek at what's to come
• Let's take a peek at the generated source code by clicking the Source tab.
• Event capturing provides an opportunity to peek at events before they are delivered to their target.

Saturday, August 2, 2014

to express position

TO PRECEDE OR TO FOLLOW = to come before or after something

• An assertion is a test on the characters following or preceding the current matching point



TO LOCATE = to find the exact position of something

• We cannot locate the hotel with GPS even typing the address.
• Assisting a consumer in locating a product within a retail store.
Locating information within extended hypermedia .



TO PLACE = to put something somewhere, especially with care [= put]:

• Always place the code that require the most processing power last in relational operations.
• You can place a single event handler on the containing element instead of on all its childred.



TO ARRANGE = to put a group of things in a particular order or position.

• Tips for arranging living room furniture.
• How to arrange flowers in a vase.
• In Microsoft Windows you can arrange the desktop icons by name, size, type and latest modified date.
• A FlowPanel arranges components in a directional flow.



LEADING - TRAILING - IN-BETWEEN = coming in the front part - in the back part - in the middle of something

• How to remove the leading and trailing white spaces from a string.
• You can find unwanted blanks everywhere: Leading, Trailing, In-Between.



THE BEGINNING OR THE END OF SOMETHING

• The multiline option changes the interpretation of the ^ and $ elements so that they match the beginning and end of a line, instead of the beginning and end of the input string.
At the beginning of the chapter we mentioned that ...



AHEAD OR BEHIND = a short distance in front or at the back of someone or something:

Look-ahead and look-behind, collectively called "look-around", are zero-length assertions just like the start and end of line, and start and end of word anchors.
• He kept his gaze fixed on the car ahead.


INTERMEDIATE /ˌɪn tərˈmi di ɪt/ = (adj) being, situated between two points, stages, things, persons, etc.:

• It takes a lot of time to go from English intermediate level to upper level.

Monday, March 24, 2014

to refer to vs to relate vs to reference

TO REFER TO SB/SMT (phrasal verb) /rɪˈfɜr/ =

1. to mention or speak about someone or something [= to cite, to indicate, to specify].

• She didn't once refer to her son.
• We agreed never to refer to the matter again.
• Even if when she was asked she declined to say, everyone knew whom she was referring to.
• Pliny the Younger referred to Christians in Asia Minor, but he didn't refer to Jesus.
• When you refer to someone's looks, you are referring to how beautiful or ugly they are, especially how beautiful they are.
• In the CSS box model each box has a content area and optional surrounding padding, border, and margin areas. The following box model diagram shows how these areas relate and the terminology used to refer to pieces of margin, border, and padding.
• A JavaScript object is a collection of properties, we refer to the value of a property using the dot notation.

 refer to somebody/something as [= to call]
• Valentino Rossi likes to be referred to as 'The Doctor'.
• The trend today is to refer to marine algae used as food as sea vegetables.
• The directory where the eclipse IDE saves all its files is referred to as workspace
• The process of converting a video into another format is sometimes referred to as "encoding" the video.

 refer to somebody/something by
• The hospital now refers to patients by name, not number.
• Bradley Manning, the U.S. soldier sentenced to 35 years in military prison, said he is female and wants to live as a woman named Chelsea. "I request that starting today you refer to me by my new name and use the feminine pronoun." [Reuters]

2. If a writing or information refers to someone or something, it is about that person or thing [= to be about, to concern, to apply to].
• The figures refer to trade in bananas.
• Resolution refers to the number of dots a screen shows per inch.
• AJAX refers to a set of techniques including the use of JavaScript, CSS, and asynchronous HTTP
requests.
• Traditionally, the term 'form' has referred to a printed document that contains spaces for you to fill in information. HTML borrows the concept of a form to refer to different elements that allow you to collect information from visitors to your site.

3. to look at a book, map, piece of paper etc for information. [= to seek information, to consult]
• This book is not aimed at beginners. Those readers should instead refer to books such as Beginning JavaScript and Professional JavaScript for Web Developers.



TO RELATE /rɪˈleɪt/ = [intransitive] if two things relate, they are connected in some way [= to have relation, to link, to associate].

• JavaScript should not be confused with Java. They are not related, the only commonality between the two is in their name.
• In 1964 a physicist by the name of Peter Higgs proposed that there was an energy field that permeated the entire universe, this energy field is now called the Higgs field. The energy field that Higgs proposed would interact with subatomic particles and give them a mass. The very massive particles would interact a lot with the field while massless particles would not interact at all. In the press you don't hear about the Higgs' field but about the Higgs' Boson: how these two thing relate? The Higgs's Boson is the smallest bit of Higgs field.   [http://physicsforme.com/]
• Having determined the content of your site, you can group the information into related chunks and create a site map. That site map shows each of the pages of your site, how they relate to each other, and what needs to appear on them.
• How are sex and love related for you ?



TO REFERENCE = [transitive] (written) to mention another book, article etc that contains information connected with the subject you are writing about [= to mention another book].

• When you are referencing a piece of work such as a book, film or research paper, the HTML <cite> element can be used to indicate where the citation is from.
• In this chapter, we begin working with a simpler version of the sample application. Then, in subsequent chapters, we will reference more complete versions of the sample application.
• The book does not reference anything written in the last 10 years.