different between clew vs glew

clew

English

Etymology

Middle English clewe, from Old English cleowen, cliewen, cliwen (sphere, ball, skein; ball of thread or yarn; mass, group), from Proto-Germanic *kliuwin?, *klewô (ball, bale), from Proto-Indo-European *glew- (to conglomerate, gather into a mass; clump, ball, bale). Akin to Old English cl?? (clay).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /klu?/
  • (obsolete) IPA(key): /klju?/
    Rhymes: -u?
    Homophone: clue

Noun

clew (plural clews)

  1. (obsolete) A roughly spherical mass or body.
    • c. 1600, Charles Estienne and Jean Liebault, tr. Richard Surflet, Maison Rustique, or, The Countrie Farme:
      If the whole troupe be diuided into many clewes, or round bunches, you need not then doubt but that there are many kings.
  2. (archaic) A ball of thread or yarn.
    • 1831, Victor Hugo, tr. Isabel Florence Hapgood, The Hunchback of Notre Dame:
      A rare, precious, and never interrupted race of philosophers to whom wisdom, like another Ariadne, seems to have given a clew of thread which they have been walking along unwinding since the beginning of the world, through the labyrinth of human affairs.
    • 1889, Andrew Lang, The Blue Fairy Book, "The story of Prince Ahmed and the fairy Paribanou":
      The Fairy Paribanou was at that time very hard at work, and, as she had several clews of thread by her, she took up one, and, presenting it to Prince Ahmed, said: "First take this clew of thread...
  3. Yarn or thread as used to guide one's way through a maze or labyrinth; a guide, a clue.
  4. (nautical) The lower corner(s) of a sail to which a sheet is attached for trimming the sail (adjusting its position relative to the wind); the metal loop or cringle in the corner of the sail, to which the sheet is attached. (on a triangular sail) The trailing corner relative to the wind direction.
    • 1858, The Atlantic Monthly, "The Language of the Sea":
      "Clew" is Saxon; "garnet" (from granato, a fruit) is Italian,—that is, the garnet- or pomegranate-shaped block fastened to the clew or corner of the courses, and hence the rope running through the block.
  5. (in the plural) The sheets so attached to a sail.
    • 1913, John Masefield, Dauber
      The canvas running up in a proud sweep,
      Wind-wrinkled at the clews, and white like lint,
  6. (nautical, in the plural) The cords suspending a hammock.
    • 2000, Ralph W Danklefsen, The Navy I Remember, Xlibris 2000, p. 21:
      He taught us how to attach the clews to the ends of the hammock and then lash it between jack stays.
  7. Obsolete spelling of clue
    • 1848, Thomas Babington Macaulay, The History of England from the Accession of James II, Volume III, 1856, Harper & Brothers, New York, page 13,
      The clew, without which it was perilous to enter the vast and intricate maze of Continental politics, was in his hands.
    • 1910, "Duck Eats Yeast," The Yakima Herald:
      Telltale marks around the pan of yeast gave him a clew to the trouble.
    • 1926, Robertus Love, The Rise and Fall of Jesse James, University of Nebraska, 1990:
      Not often did Jesse James leave a clew to his identity when he galloped away from a crime of violence, back into the mysterious Nowhere whence he came.
    • 1954, Robert Heinlein, The Star Beast, New English Library:
      following the single clew that she must have gone off with a certain group of visitors from space; they knew what those visitors looked like but not from what part of the sky they came.

Coordinate terms

  • (lower corner of a sail): bunt

Derived terms

  • (lower corner of a sail ; metal loop or cringle in the corner of the sail): clewline

Translations

Verb

clew (third-person singular simple present clews, present participle clewing, simple past and past participle clewed)

  1. (transitive) to roll into a ball
  2. (nautical) (transitive and intransitive) to raise the lower corner(s) of (a sail)

See also

  • clew-garnet
  • clef
  • clue

References


Middle English

Noun

clew

  1. Alternative form of clewe

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glew

English

Etymology 1

From Middle English glew, glu, etc.

Noun

glew (countable and uncountable, plural glews)

  1. Obsolete form of glue.
    • 1764, Edmund Burke, Dodsley's annual register: Volume 1758, Part 1 (page 385)
      When the painting is originally on wood, it must be first detached from the ceiling or wainscot where it was fixed; and the surface of it covered with a linen cloth, cemented to it by means of glew []

Etymology 2

Formed on the analogy of know, grow (and other verbs which are now weak in the standard such as crow, mow). Probably not from Early Middle English glew (glowed) or its ancestor Old English gl?ow (glowed), due to the long gap in attestation.

Verb

glew

  1. (nonstandard) simple past tense of glow

Middle English

Etymology 1

From Old French glu, from Late Latin gl?s, from Latin gl?ten, from Proto-Italic *gloiten.

Alternative forms

  • glu, glue, glewe, gleu, glowe, glyw, glyu, gleuwe, gluwe

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?liu?/

Noun

glew (plural glewes)

  1. A adhesive or adherent; something that binds:
    1. glue; a substance designed to adhere two things together.
    2. birdlime; a trap or capturing mechanism.
    3. A tar or resin; any natural adherent.

Related terms

  • glewen
  • glewer
  • glewy
  • glewysch
  • gluynge

Descendants

  • English: glue
  • Scots: glue

References

  • “gleu, n.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 2018-07-1.

Etymology 2

Noun

glew

  1. Alternative form of gleu.

Etymology 3

Verb

glew

  1. Alternative form of glewen (to play music, have fun).

Etymology 4

Verb

glew

  1. Alternative form of glewen (to glue).

Welsh

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?l?u?/

Adjective

glew (feminine singular glew, plural glewion, equative glewed, comparative glewach, superlative glewaf)

  1. brave, bold

Synonyms

  • (brave): gwrol, dewr

Mutation

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