different between glazen vs gladen
glazen
English
Etymology
From Middle English glasen, glesne, from Old English glesen (“made of glass; glassy”), from Proto-West Germanic *glas?n. Equivalent to glass +? -en. Doublet of glassen.
Adjective
glazen (comparative more glazen, superlative most glazen)
- Made or consisting of glass.
- Resembling glass; glassy.
Synonyms
- glassen
- glasslike
Dutch
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -a?z?n
- IPA(key): /??la?.z?(n)/
Etymology 1
From Middle Dutch gl?sen, gl?sijn, from Old Dutch *glasin, *glas?n, from Proto-West Germanic *glas?n. Equivalent to glas +? -en.
Adjective
glazen (not comparable)
- made of glass
- glassy, resembling glass
- Synonym: glazig
Inflection
Etymology 2
Borrowed from English glaze.
Verb
glazen
- (transitive) to glaze, make look like glass
- (transitive) to polish
- Synonyms: opblinken, polijsten
Inflection
Derived terms
- glaasster
- glaassteen
Etymology 3
See the etymology of the main entry.
Noun
glazen
- Plural form of glas
Anagrams
- glanze
glazen From the web:
- what is glazen paper
- what is glazen meaning
- what does glaze mean
gladen
English
Etymology 1
From Old English glaedene from Latin gladiolus (“little sword; sword lily”).
Alternative forms
- gladdon
- glader
- gladwyn
Noun
gladen (uncountable)
- Sword grass.
- Any plant with sword-shaped leaves, especially Iris foetidissima.
Etymology 2
Verb
gladen (third-person singular simple present gladens, present participle gladening, simple past and past participle gladened)
- Obsolete form of gladden.
- 14th c, unknown translator, The Book of Canticles, transcription in 1836, Adam Clarke (editor), The Holy Bible: With a Commentary and Critical Notes, Volume 2, page 506,
- We schul ful out joyen and gladen in thee, myndful of the tetis upon wyn, rigtmen loven thee.
- c. 1380s, Geoffrey Chaucer, Troilus and Criseyde, 2004, page 67,
- And to Pandare he held up bothe his hondes, / And seyde, 'Lord, al thyne be that I have, For I am hool, al brosten been my bondes: / A thousand Troians who so that me yave, / Eche after other, god so wis me save, / Ne mighte me so gladen; lo myn herte, / It spredeth so for loye, it wol to-sterte!
- 1863, Jason Ham, Sanitary Report from Louisville, Ky, 1865, Documentary Journal of the General Assembly of the State Indiana, page 166,
- This is a pleasant part of my duty, it gladens my heart to be able to bestow upon the afflicted boys some of the comforts of home and former days.
- 14th c, unknown translator, The Book of Canticles, transcription in 1836, Adam Clarke (editor), The Holy Bible: With a Commentary and Critical Notes, Volume 2, page 506,
Conjugation
Anagrams
- Glenda, angled, dangle, geland
gladen From the web:
- what does gladden mean
- laden means
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