When she found out she won the grand prize of 100 dollars in the talent show, she was gleaming with joy.
The lights were gleaming so brightly I could hardly keep my eyes open.
Hers eyes gleamed with joy whenever he came into sight.
The placid waters of the lake gleamed like bright silver in the moonlight.
Before every boy scouts meeting he would burnish the brass buckle on his belt until it gleamed like solid gold.
The suffix 'ing' can be added to verbs and adjitives to show that the word is in the present tense. For example: The athlete RAN. Vs The athlete was RUNNING OR: The metal gleamed. Vs The metal is GLIMMERING
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This is how:Her whole face gleamed the moment she saw the puppy.
The moon gleamed on the white-washed tombstone, recalling memories of old times.
The figurative language in this sentence is personification, as it attributes human qualities (gleaming with pride) to a non-human entity (LaTonya in this case).
Before every boy scouts meeting he would burnish the brass buckle on his belt until it gleamed like solid gold.
His smile gleamed brightly from beneath his tangled mass of hair.
"Ebony" can be used as a noun and an adjective:Black piano keys are traditionally made of ebony.The gold necklace gleamed against her ebony skin.
The word gleamed has one syllable.
No. Gleamed is a verb form, the past tense and past participle of to gleam. The present participle, gleaming, has an adverb form, which is gleamingly.
shone
A few are: Shined, glistened, or glowed.
The metallic thread added a nice touch to the embroidery. The sauce had been cooked in aluminum and had a metallic taste to it. The metallic surface had been polished until it gleamed.
No, this is not a metaphor. It is a vivid description of someone with a broad smile shining brightly despite the dim lighting. Metaphors are comparisons that do not use "like" or "as" to connect two things.