sparkling
/ˈspɑːklɪŋ/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈspɑːrklɪŋ/ (ame, ipa)
sparkling — adjective
- sparklingpositive
- more sparklingcomparative
- most sparklingsuperlative
1. catching and reflecting light in many small flashes, so that a surface or object
catching and reflecting light in many small flashes, so that a surface or object looks bright and lively — like a diamond, clean window, or a smooth stretch of water under direct sun.
Christopher noticed the sparkling diamond bracelet in the jeweller's window display.
attributive use before nouns (sparkling diamond)
Tamar wiped the kitchen counter until it was sparkling clean.
collocation: sparkling clean
The sea looked sparkling blue under the hot afternoon sun.
Élise hung sparkling fairy lights across the balcony for the party.
Sumin polished the silver spoons until they had a sparkling finish.
- glittering
similar in meaning but often suggests a more scattered, less smooth reflection; common for jewellery and stars
- shimmering
suggests a soft, wavering light rather than distinct flashes; often used for water or heat haze
- twinkling
suggests a repeated on-off pattern of small lights; used for stars, distant city lights
用法筆記
Commonly used as an attributive adjective before nouns such as diamond, water, light, surface, smile, eyes. The verb-dropped collocation sparkling clean is idiomatic and means 'extremely clean'.
常見錯誤
2. full of energy, cleverness, and the ability to attract and hold interest — used
full of energy, cleverness, and the ability to attract and hold interest — used about a person's conversation, performance, writing style, wit, or personality.
Tunde gave a sparkling speech at the graduation ceremony that held everyone's attention.
attributive: sparkling + speech / conversation / performance
Nellie is known for her sparkling wit and quick answers in class debates.
The magazine published a sparkling review of the young pianist's debut concert.
Mauricio wrote a sparkling essay that the teacher read aloud to the whole class.
Linh's sparkling personality made her popular with colleagues from every department.
- brilliant
stronger in suggesting outstanding intelligence or talent, while sparkling emphasises energetic attractiveness
- lively
closer in register, but livelier suggests physical energy and animation, while sparkling adds a layer of wit or cleverness
- witty
narrower — only covers humour and clever remarks, not the full range of engaging qualities
用法筆記
Describes abstract nouns almost exclusively — speech, conversation, wit, humour, personality, performance, writing, review, dialogue. Not used directly of people (*a sparkling person is not idiomatic); instead use sparkling personality or sparkling wit.
常見錯誤
3. containing many tiny bubbles of gas that rise to the surface — describing drinks
containing many tiny bubbles of gas that rise to the surface — describing drinks such as champagne, soda water, mineral water, or carbonated soft drinks.
Cyrus ordered a glass of sparkling water with a slice of lemon.
collocation: sparkling water
Alessia opened a bottle of sparkling wine to celebrate her sister's engagement.
collocation: sparkling wine
Kian filled the children's cups with sparkling apple juice for the party.
The supermarket sells both still and sparkling mineral water in glass bottles.
Hugo prefers sparkling drinks but his wife finds the bubbles uncomfortable.
- fizzy
more informal (common in British English); in American English fizzy can sound slightly childish, while sparkling is neutral
- carbonated
more technical; used on product labels but less common in everyday speech
- effervescent
very formal and scientific; describes bubbles escaping from a liquid
用法筆記
Standard attributive usage (sparkling wine, sparkling water) and predicative usage (this water is sparkling). For soft drinks, sparkling is used for deliberately carbonated beverages; for natural spring water, sparkling (or naturally sparkling) indicates water with naturally occurring bubbles at the source.