• “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.

