| 释义 | 
		shim·mer I. \ˈshimə(r)\ verb (shimmered ; shimmered ; shimmering \-m(ə)riŋ\ ; shimmers) Etymology: Middle English schimeren, schemeren, from Old English scimerian; akin to Middle Low German schēmeren to get dark, German schimmern to glimmer, Old English scīmian to shine, grow dark, scīma ray, light, brightness — more at shim intransitive verb 1.  : to shine with a tremulous or fitful light : gleam faintly : glimmer  < the street lights shimmered behind the veil of snow — Morley Callaghan >  < by moonlight its powdery sands shimmer like snow — D.L.Graham > 2.  : to reflect a wavering sometimes distorted visual image  < heat waves shimmered before our eyes — F.P.Conant > transitive verb  : to cause to shimmer  < the night breeze … stirred the leaves on trees, shimmering them in the moonlight — Stuart Cloete > II. noun (-s) 1.  : a fitful, tremulous light : glimmer : a subdued sparkle or sheen : a scintillating effect  < the faint shimmer of heat lightning — R.P.Warren >  < the shimmer of young foliage — L.P.Smith >  < enough to give a shimmer of danger to the atmosphere — Ellery Sedgwick > 2.  : a wavering sometimes distorted visual image usually produced by a reflection from heat waves  < the slate roofs sent shimmers up … in the glare — Elizabeth Bowen >  < a constant shimmer of heat over wide concrete highways — S.W.Matthews > III. transitive verb (-ed/-ing/-s) Etymology: shim (II) + -er (freq. suffix) 1.  : shim 1 2.  : to fit a shim between surfaces of (work) IV. noun (-s) Etymology: shim (III) + -er (n. suffix) 1.   a.  : one that shims  b.  : shim 2.  : one that inserts shims |