Glazed in a sentence as an adjective

My other colleagues at that time, their eyes glazed over for the most part.

It's really OK, I am not out on the street with glazed-over eyes wondering what could've been.

It certainly could be said that staring glazed-face at a glowing rectangle in front of you looks dorky as well.

No destination in particular, just putting one foot in front of the other, probably with a glazed look on my face.

They may not even be conscious of this process but that's what I think is happening when you say something to bad groups and they have that glazed over look.

That seems like a really odd point to challenge, especially because he set the bar as "not out on the street with glazed-over eyes wondering what could've been.

The author seems to have glazed over quite a bit of the rather mature Python ecosystem simply because it lives in a general purpose language.

But, having gotten the 'eyes glazed over' look by every professional woman with whom I've tried to talk software within the last year, one just gets sort of trained after awhile.

So you glazed over the point in the original post:the problem is not with what you are thinking when you read the word "bro", but with what other people, especially newcomers, are thinking.

If you go to a potential client and try to sell them on the fact that you are the best Java developer in 5 states, they are going to look at you with glazed eyes and stop listening.

This app is nothing more than popularity-through-absurdity, that it even glazed the eyes of millions is a testament to our culture's obsession with irony, which only further feeds the fuel to the fire.

You've seen it before if you're in IT, that glazed eyes look when explaining why their Word document is missingAnyone with judicial experience know if judges have trusted advisory panels that can help wrap their heads around technology to better rule on cases such as this?

Glazed definitions

adjective

(used of eyes) lacking liveliness; "empty eyes"; "a glassy stare"; "his eyes were glazed over with boredom"

See also: glassy

adjective

fitted or covered with glass; "four glazed walls"

See also: glassed

adjective

having a shiny surface or coating; "glazed fabrics"; "glazed doughnuts"

See also: shiny

adjective

(of foods) covered with a shiny coating by applying e.g. beaten egg or a sugar or gelatin mixture; "glazed doughnuts"; "a glazed ham"