glassen
English
Etymology 1
From Middle English glassen, glasen, from Old English glæsen (“made of glass”), from Proto-Germanic *glasīnaz (“made of glass; glazen”), equivalent to glass + -en (adjective suffix). Doublet of glazen.
Adjective
glassen (comparative more glassen, superlative most glassen)
- Made of or consisting of glass.
- 2012, B. Suchoff, Bela Bartok, Rumanian Folk Music:
- From the castle calls Ileana, Refrain (Looking) through the glassen windows, (Looking) through the glassen windows: […]
- 2013, Allen G. Debus, The Chemical Philosophy:
- But I had a glassen vessel, of a narrow neck, weighing 1354 grains: […]
- 2012, B. Suchoff, Bela Bartok, Rumanian Folk Music:
- Resembling glass; glassy; glazed.
- Ben Jonson
- And pursues the dice with glassen eyes.
- 2004, John Coulson Tregarthen, John Penrose: A Romance of the Land's End:
- Abreast of the players, he jumped down, seized one of the taws - it was a glassen alley - knuckled down, fired kibby at the clayers in the ring, and was back in his seat before you could cry "Jack Robinson".
- Ben Jonson
Verb
glassen (third-person singular simple present glassens, present participle glassening, simple past and past participle glassened)
Synonyms
- glaze (verb)
Middle English
References
- “glasen, (adj.)” in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 28 April 2018.
Swedish
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