glowersome

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From glower +‎ -some.

Adjective[edit]

glowersome (comparative more glowersome, superlative most glowersome)

  1. (dated) Involving a glower (an angry glare or stare); sullen, gloomy.
    • 1895 November 23, Dorothy Lundt, “The Office Cat: Her Mewsings”, in Boston Commonwealth, volume XXXV, number 47, Boston, M.A.: Commonwealth Publishing Company, page 14:
      The Office Cat relapsed into a glowersome and sulky silence. But I thought, as the elevator went down, I heard her raucous tones in the refrain of an ancient college song, which begins—— ¶ 'The man who takes'——
    • 1918, Jeffery Farnol, Our Admirable Betty: A Romance, Boston, M.A.: Little, Brown, and Company, page 87:
      'T was a-quaking i' the ruin o' the owd mill, dithering and dathering glowersome like.
    • 1926 November 23, Damon Runyon, “The Hall-Mills Case”, in Trials and Other Tribulations, Philadelphia, P.A.: J. B. Lippincott Company, published 1947, page 66:
      Mr. Arthur Applegate was really more glowersome at Senator Simpson than any of the others.
    • 1944, May Justus, Banjo Billy and Mr. Bones, Chicago, I.L.: Albert Whitman & Company, page 25:
      Uncle Josiah and Aunt Sally Ann both sympathized with Billy over the loss of his banjo. ¶ "But of course it's no good to get in a glowersome mood over it," advised Uncle Josiah.