English edit

Etymology edit

up- +‎ glance

Noun edit

upglance (plural upglances)

  1. An upwards glance.
    • 1885, Mary Greenway McClelland, Oblivion: An Episode, page 136:
      See him bend over the woman, and the upglance of her eyes as she speaks.
    • 1917, Willis George Emerson, A Vendetta of the Hills, page 265:
      "Well, we'll have a good start at all events," said Merle, with a merry little upglance.
    • 1923, Lucy Maud Montgomery, Emily of New Moon:
      Nobody had as yet told Emily how very winsome that shy, sudden, upglance of hers was.
    • 2012, Francis Lynde, The Master of Appleby A Novel Tale Concerning Itself in Part with the Great Struggle in the Two Carolinas, →ISBN:
      "Give it me!" she insisted; this with an impatient little stamp of the foot and an upglance of the compelling eyes that would have constrained me to do a far foolisher thing, had she asked it.

Verb edit

upglance (third-person singular simple present upglances, present participle upglancing, simple past and past participle upglanced)

  1. (obsolete) To glance upwards.
    • 1864, Jenny Wren, Facts and fancies, in prose and verse, page 195:
      I stood beside her couch, with her thin fingers clasped round my hand ever so long, looking down at the earnest eyes upglancing from the pillow.
    • 1887, James Abraham Martling, Poems of Home and Country, page 300:
      Or the rapturous light that upglances From the eyes of a myriad Loves.
    • 1888, Virgil (Oliver Crane, trans.), The Aeneid, page 116:
      All of a sudden upglances Æneas, and under a cliff on the left hand Sees broad battlements loom, by a tripple enclosure surrounded, Which, with its torrent of flame, the Tartarean Phlegethon's rapid River encircles, and hurls the reverberant rocks on its current.
    • 1890, John Muir, Picturesque Californa:
      And with what eager enthusiasm it accepts its fate, dashing on side angles, surging against round, bossy knobs, swirling in pot holes, upglancing in shallow, curved basins, then bounding out over the brink and down the grand descent, more air than water, glowing like a sun beaten cloud.