Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
oeillade
{
oe-il′iad
(ē̍-ĭl′y[ai]d or ĭl′y[ai]d)
, ‖oeil′ladeˊ
(ẽ′yȧdˊ)
, } Noun.
A glance of the eye; an amorous look.
[Obs.]
She gave strange
oeillades
and most speaking looks. Shakespeare
Definition 2024
oeillade
oeillade
See also: œillade
English
Noun
oeillade (plural oeillades)
- (literary) A glance, especially an amorous one; an ogle
- 1608, William Shakespeare, King Lear, IV.4:
- I know your Lady do's not loue her Husband, / I am sure of that: and at her late being heere, / She gaue strange Eliads, and most speaking lookes / To Noble Edmund.
- 1984, Anthony Burgess, Enderby's Dark Lady:
- ‘My, my,’ she said, with an oeillade meant to be comic.
- 1999, Michael Billington, The Guardian, 4 Sep 1999:
- But the shifting moral tone is perfectly caught in Helen McCrory's polymorphous Phocion, who is mischievously aware of her sexual power and switches from macho snarls when seducing a woman to flirty oeillades when playing with a man.
- 1608, William Shakespeare, King Lear, IV.4:
Translations
glance, ogle