释义 |
▪ I. † ˈglamer, n. Sc. Obs. [? Alteration of clamour; but cf. glam1 and Icel. glamra to rattle. Gael. clambar wrangling, evil report, scandal, and glambar noise, outcry, are prob. from Eng. or Scottish.] A loud noise or tumult; public outcry, scandal.
1500–20Dunbar Poems lvii. 20 Sum [seekers after office] hes thair advocattis in chamer And takis thame selffe thairof na glamer. 1570Satir. Poems Reform. x. 182 Than come ȝour king and sum Lords with ane glamer, And reft him [Riccio] from hir. 1584Ibid. xlv. 393 Without respect of warldlie glamer He past into the witchis chalmer. Hence † ˈglamer v. trans., to raise a clamour against, defame. † ˈglamerous a., noisy, clamorous.
c1470Henry Wallace viii. 302 At the reskew thar was a glamrous rerd. 1490Extracts Aberd. Reg. (1844) I. 46 Openly glammerand him, saiand scho sald ger banys the said Schir John out of this toune. ▪ II. glamer, glammar, glamor obs. ff. glamour. |