Crossword-Solution: GLAMOUR
Dictionary
| Word | Word Type | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| Glamour | n. | A charm affecting the eye, making objects appear different from what they really are. |
| Glamour | n. | Witchcraft; magic; a spell. |
| Glamour | n. | A kind of haze in the air, causing things to appear different from what they really are. |
| Glamour | n. | Any artificial interest in, or association with, an object, through which it appears delusively magnified or glorified. |
We have 72 clues for the answer “GLAMOUR”
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Kind of apple
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Hint 1 meaning
One who, or that which, eats.
Hint 2 anagram
ATERE
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
11 +2
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Sentences with GLAMOUR (5)
She felt somewhat like a woman who in a moment of passion is betrayed into an act of infidelity, and realizes the significance of the act without being wholly awakened from its glamour.
Gertrude Coppard watched the young miner as he danced, a certain subtle exultation like glamour in his movement, and his face the flower of his body, ruddy, with tumbled black hair, and laughing alike whatever partner he bowed above.
Could any woman make a more sweeping retraction than that? The romantic glamour which Judy cast over this orphan asylum exists only in her poetic imagination.
The skies were fairer and shores were firmer-- The blue sea over the bright sand roll'd; Babble and prattle, and ripple and murmur, Sheen of silver and glamour of gold-- And the sunset bath'd in the gulf to lend her A garland of pinks and of purples tender, A tinge of the sun-god's rosy splendour, A tithe of his glories manifold.
For Edward, the uniforms, accoutrements, colours, and mottoes of the regiments composing the British Army had a special glamour.
Quotes with GLAMOUR (3)
We can trace the communitarian fantasy that lies at the root of all humanism back to the model of a literary society, in which participation through reading the canon reveals a common love of inspiring messages. At the heart of humanism so understood we discover a cult or club fantasy: the dream of the portentous solidarity of those who have been chosen to be allowed to read. In the ancient world — indeed, until the dawn of the modern nation-states — the power of reading actu…
No one knew much about the Twenty-Eighth Infantry. It was not a glamour outfit. They knew about the Big Red One and the Screaming Eagles, about the Eighty-Second Airborne and Hell On Wheels, but not about Twenty-Eighth Infantry. The name was met with a certain silence, as if he was in a room full of Harvard graduates and told them his degree was by correspondence.
It is, I think, this glamour, this magic, this incomparable keying up of the spirit in a time of mortal conflict, which constitute the pacifist's real problem--a problem still incompletely imagined and still quite unsolved. The causes of war are always falsely represented; its honour is dishonest and its glory meretricious, but the challenge to spiritual endurance, the intense sharpening of all the senses, the vitalising consciousness of common peril for a common end, remain …
Where this answer appears
Appears in: Crossroads, LAT, Newsday, NYT, WSJ.
Used 17 times in crossword archives (1965–2025).