She gave me a fierce glare.
1 unpleasantly bright or strong light: --
3 to look directly and continuously at someone or something in an angry way: --
4 to look at someone angrily and without moving your eyes: --
He is glaring into the television cameras and telling them how tough he is today, or anyway that he will be with luck tomorrow.
Our study also demonstrates a glaring differential in advance care planning by age, with advance directives much more common for older residents than for younger residents.
There are no glaring mismatches between fitt changes and narrative transitions in the work of the first scribe as there are in that of the second.
Underlying the military debacle was the regime's political defeat, itself the result of a glaring discrepancy between the state's needs for warmaking and society's meagre resources.
I think his complaints boil down to three main issues: glaring functional problems in prize-winning buildings, arrogant architects out of touch with popular taste, and prejudiced competition juries.
Next, when peoples' income and expenditure are compared a glaring contradiction prevails: the poor are found to be spending just over twice the income they claim to have.
Viral proteins with assigned functions appear to be well conserved with one glaring exception.
His 'introduction' is a swirling kaleidoscope of bright and glaring sound soon stalled by that whimsical contrabass clarinet - supported by equally whimsical percussion.