Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun Plural form of glamor.

Etymologies

Sorry, no etymologies found.

Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word glamors.

Examples

  • In this, as in other respects, the glamors and passions of life were just literature to him.

    Economic Principals David Warsh 1993

  • "Mostly they're too dim to be fooled by low-grade glamors."

    She Is The Darkness Cook, Glen 1997

  • A fling at hobo life, ten voyages at sea and more than two years of army life (a year and a half of this time spent in trekking all over the shattered landscape of France) do not shake my conviction that the adventurer most to be envied in our times is the cub reporter enjoying the first thrills and glamors of breaking into print.

    If You Don't Write Fiction Charles Phelps Cushing

  • And so he began to float upward again; glamors enveloped him and the earth fell away.

    Seventeen 1915

  • During the glamors of early love, if there be a creature more deadly than the little brother of a budding woman, that creature is the little sister of a budding man.

    Seventeen 1915

  • And so he began to float upward again; glamors enveloped him and the earth fell away.

    Seventeen A Tale of Youth and Summer Time and the Baxter Family Especially William Booth Tarkington 1907

  • During the glamors of early love, if there be a creature more deadly than the little brother of a budding woman, that creature is the little sister of a budding man.

    Seventeen A Tale of Youth and Summer Time and the Baxter Family Especially William Booth Tarkington 1907

Comments

Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.