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1 glaesum
glaesum ( glēsum, glessum), i, n. [cf. Germ. Glas; gleissen = glänzen, to glimmer; Engl. glass], amber, Tac. G. 45; Plin. 37, 3, 11, § 42.—Hence, glaesārĭus, a, um, adj., of amber, amber-:insula,
which produces amber, Plin. 4, 13, 27, § 97; 37, 3, 11, § 42. -
2 glaesum
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3 glaesum or glēsum
glaesum or glēsum ī, n [cf. Engl. glass, gloss], amber, Ta. -
4 glaesarius
glaesum ( glēsum, glessum), i, n. [cf. Germ. Glas; gleissen = glänzen, to glimmer; Engl. glass], amber, Tac. G. 45; Plin. 37, 3, 11, § 42.—Hence, glaesārĭus, a, um, adj., of amber, amber-:insula,
which produces amber, Plin. 4, 13, 27, § 97; 37, 3, 11, § 42. -
5 glessum
glaesum ( glēsum, glessum), i, n. [cf. Germ. Glas; gleissen = glänzen, to glimmer; Engl. glass], amber, Tac. G. 45; Plin. 37, 3, 11, § 42.—Hence, glaesārĭus, a, um, adj., of amber, amber-:insula,
which produces amber, Plin. 4, 13, 27, § 97; 37, 3, 11, § 42. -
6 GLER
* * *n.1) glass;háll sem gler, slippery as glass;bresta í gleri, to break into shivers;2) looking-glass.* * *n. [A. S. glæs; Engl. glass; Germ. glass; early Dan. glar; the mod. Dan. and Swed. glas seem to be borrowed from Germ.; Icel. distinguish between gler ( glass) and glas ( a small glass bottle); but s seems to be the original consonant, and the word is akin to Glasir, glys, glæsa, q. v.]:—the word originally meant amber, ‘succinum’ quod ipsi (viz. the Germans) glaesum vocant, Tacit. Germ. ch. 45; glass beads for ornament are of early use; quantities are found in the great deposits (in cairns and fens) of the earliest Iron Age, but only in a single instance in a deposit of the Brass Age (which ends about the beginning of our era), vide Ann. for Nord. Oldk. 1868, p. 118; and such is the sense of the word in the three places that it occurs in old heathen poems: magical Runes were written on glass, Sdm. 17: metaph., nú er grjót þat at gleri orðit, now those stones are turned into gler, of an altar ‘glassed’ with sacrificial blood, Hdl, 5; cp. also the curious reading, bresta í gleri, to be shivered, to break into shivers, Hým. 29,—the reading of Kb., ‘í tvau,’ is a gloss on the obsolete phrase:— glæs also occurs twice or thrice in A. S. poetry, but not in the oldest, as Beowulf, vide Grein. For window-panes glass is of much later date, and came into use with the building of cathedrals: a Danish cathedral with glass panes is mentioned in Knytl. S. ch. 58 (year 1085); in Icel. the first panes brought into the country were probably those presented by bishop Paul to the cathedral at Skalholt in the year 1195; the ancient halls and dwellings had no windows in the walls, but were lighted by louvres and by round openings (gluggr) in the roof, covered with the caul (of a new-born calf, called skjall or líkna-belgr) stretched on a frame or a hoop and called skjár: these are still used in Icel. farms; and Icel. distinguish between the round small caul windows (skjár or skjá-gluggar) and glass windows (gler-gluggar):—háll sem gler, slippery as glass, of ice, Nj. 144: in eccl. and later writings, Hom. 127, Sks. 424, Vm. 21, Fas. iii. 393: in the saying, sjaldan brýtr gæfu-maðr gler.COMPDS: gleraugu, glergluggr, glerhallr, glerhálka, glerhiminn, glerkaleikr, glerker, glerlampr, glerpottr, glersteinar, glertölur, Glerá. -
7 glīscō
glīscō —, —, ere [cf. glaesum], to swell, spread gradually, grow imperceptibly: invidia gliscens, L.: seditio, L.: (multitudo) gliscit immensum, increases, Ta.: numero legiones, Ta.: gliscit violentia Turno, V.: gliscere alqm pati, to grow in power, Ta.* * *gliscere, -, - Vswell; increase in power or violence -
8 Glaesaria
Glaesārĭa ( Glēs-), ae (sc. insula), f. [glaesum], an amber island in the North Sea, also called Burcana, Plin. 4, 13, 27, § 97; 37, 3, 11, § 42. -
9 glesum
glēsum, v. glaesum. -
10 incoquo
in-cŏquo, xi, ctum, 3, v. a., to boil in or with any thing, to boil down, to boil, seethe (not in Cic. or Cæs.).I.Lit., constr. aliquid rei alicui or re aliquā:B.radices Baccho,
in wine, Verg. G. 4, 279:cotonea melle,
Plin. 15, 17, 18. §60: glaesum adipe suis lactentis incoctum,
id. 37, 3, 11, § 46:allium fabae fractae incoctum,
id. 20, 6, 23, § 56:num viperinus his cruor incoctus herbis me fefellit,
Hor. Epod. 3, 7:sucum incoqui sole,
Plin. 12, 17, 37, § 78:sucum cum melle,
Cels. 3, 22:inter se mixta et incocta,
id. ib. fin. —Transf., to dip in, to dye:II.incocti corpora Mauri,
colored by the sun, sunburnt, Sil. 17, 637: vellera Tyrios incocta rubores (acc. Graec.), Verg. G. 3, 307:stannum aereis operibus,
i. e. to tin over, Plin. 39, 17, 48, § 162.—Trop. ( poet.):incoctum generoso pectus honesto (for imbutum),
imbued, filled with nobleness, Pers. 2, 74:quos autem plena justitia et maturitas virtutis incoxerit,
Lact. 7, 21, 6.
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