slovo | definícia |
Gloam (gcide) | Gloam \Gloam\, n.
The twilight; gloaming. [R.] --Keats.
[1913 Webster] |
Gloam (gcide) | Gloam \Gloam\, v. i. [See Gloom, Glum.]
[1913 Webster]
1. To begin to grow dark; to grow dusky.
[1913 Webster]
2. To be sullen or morose. [Obs.]
[1913 Webster] |
gloam (wn) | gloam
n 1: the time of day immediately following sunset; "he loved the
twilight"; "they finished before the fall of night" [syn:
twilight, dusk, gloaming, gloam, nightfall,
evenfall, fall, crepuscule, crepuscle] |
| podobné slovo | definícia |
angloamerican (mass) | Anglo-American
- angloamerický |
gloaming (mass) | gloaming
- súmrak |
angloamerický (msas) | angloamerický
- Anglo-American |
angloamericky (msasasci) | angloamericky
- Anglo-American |
gloaming (encz) | gloaming,soumrak n: Zdeněk Brož |
angloamerický (czen) | angloamerický,Anglo-Americanadj: Zdeněk Brož |
Anglo-American (gcide) | Anglo-American \Anglo-American\ a.
Of or pertaining to the English and Americans, or to the
descendants of Englishmen in America.
[1913 Webster]Anglo-American \Anglo-American\ n.
an American who was born in England or whose ancestors were
English.
[WordNet 1.5] |
Gloaming (gcide) | Gloaming \Gloam"ing\, n. [See Gloom.]
1. Twilight; dusk; the fall of the evening. [Scot. & North of
Eng., and in poetry.] --Hogg.
[1913 Webster]
2. Sullenness; melancholy. [Obs.] --J. Still.
[1913 Webster] |
gloam (wn) | gloam
n 1: the time of day immediately following sunset; "he loved the
twilight"; "they finished before the fall of night" [syn:
twilight, dusk, gloaming, gloam, nightfall,
evenfall, fall, crepuscule, crepuscle] |
gloaming (wn) | gloaming
n 1: the time of day immediately following sunset; "he loved the
twilight"; "they finished before the fall of night" [syn:
twilight, dusk, gloaming, gloam, nightfall,
evenfall, fall, crepuscule, crepuscle] |
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