gloss

See also: gloss- and gloss.

English

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ɡlɒs/
  • (General American) IPA(key): /ɡlɔs/
  • (cotcaught merger) IPA(key): /ɡlɑs/
  • Audio (US):(file)
  • Rhymes: -ɒs, -ɔːs

Etymology 1

Probably from a North Germanic language, compare Icelandic glossi (spark, flame), glossa (to flame); or perhaps from dialectal Dutch gloos (a glow, flare), related to West Frisian gloeze (a glow), Middle Low German glȫsen (to smoulder, glow), German glosen (to smoulder); ultimately from Proto-Germanic *glus- (to glow, shine), from Proto-Indo-European *ǵʰel- (to flourish; be green or yellow). More at glow.

Noun

gloss (usually uncountable, plural glosses)

  1. A surface shine or luster.
    Synonyms: brilliance, gleam, luster, sheen, shine
  2. (figuratively) A superficially or deceptively attractive appearance.
    Synonyms: façade, front, veneer.
    • 1770, [Oliver] Goldsmith, The Deserted Village, a Poem, London: [] W[illiam] Griffin, [], →OCLC:
      To me more dear, congenial to my heart, / One native charm than all the gloss of art.
    • 2013 September 7, Daniel Taylor, “Danny Welbeck leads England's rout of Moldova but hit by Ukraine ban”, in The Guardian[1]:
      Hodgson may now have to bring in James Milner on the left and, on that basis, a certain amount of gloss was taken off a night on which Welbeck scored twice but barely celebrated either before leaving the pitch angrily complaining to the Slovakian referee.
Derived terms
Translations

Verb

gloss (third-person singular simple present glosses, present participle glossing, simple past and past participle glossed)

  1. (transitive) To give a gloss or sheen to.
    Synonyms: polish, shine
  2. (transitive) To make (something) attractive by deception
    • 1722, Ambrose Philips, The Briton:
      You have the art to gloss the foulest cause.
  3. (intransitive) To become shiny.
  4. (transitive, idiomatic) Used in a phrasal verb: gloss over (to cover up a mistake or crime, to treat something with less care than it deserves).
Derived terms
Translations

Etymology 2

From Middle English glosse, glose, from Late Latin glōssa (obsolete or foreign word requiring explanation), from Ancient Greek γλῶσσα (glôssa, language). Doublet of glossa.

Noun

gloss (plural glosses)

  1. (countable) A brief explanatory note or translation of a foreign, archaic, technical, difficult, complex, or uncommon expression, inserted after the original, in the margin of a document, or between lines of a text.
    Synonyms: gloze, annotation
    Hypernyms: explanation, note, marginalia
    • 1684, Samuel Butler, Hudibras:
      All this, without a gloss or comment, / He would unriddle in a moment.
    • 2021, Mary Wellesley, The Gilded Page: The Secret Lives of Medieval Manuscripts, page 9:
      He was a prolific annotator - writing around fifty thousand glosses in as many as twenty manuscripts.
  2. (countable) Synonym of glossary, a collection of such notes.
  3. (countable, obsolete) An expression requiring such explanatory treatment.
  4. (countable) An extensive commentary on some text.
    Synonyms: commentary, discourse, discussion
  5. (countable, law, US) An interpretation by a court of a specific point within a statute or case law.
    • 1979, American Bar Foundation., Annotated code of professional responsibility, page ix:
      This volume is thus not a narrowly defined treatment of the Code of Professional Responsibility but rather represents a "common law" gloss on it.
    • 2007, Bruce R. Hopkins., The law of tax-exempt organizations., page 76:
      Judicial Gloss on Test [section title]
  6. (lexicography) A definition or explanation of a word sense.
    • 2007, Martin Rajman, Speech and Language Engineering, pages 244 text=For instance the concept {cat, true cat} has the following gloss: / "feline mammal usually having thick soft fur and being unable to roar".:
    • 2011, Gabriele Stein, “The linking of lemma to gloss in Elyot's Dictionary (1538)”, in Olga Timoleeva, Tanja Saily, editor, Words in Dictionaries and History: Essays in Honour of R. W. McConchie:
      Dictionary entries comprise two essential parts, the headword ('lemma') and the author's explanation ('gloss').
    • 2019, Jonathan Kline, A Proverb a Day in Biblical Hebrew, page xi:
      Therefore, for many of the Hebrew words in this book, I have provided more than one gloss (using a slash to separate alternatives, or double slashes when a single slash would be ambiguous), in order to give you a sense of the possible meanings of nuances [] .
Derived terms
Translations

Etymology 3

From Middle English glossen, glosen, from Old French gloser and Medieval Latin glossāre.

Verb

gloss (third-person singular simple present glosses, present participle glossing, simple past and past participle glossed)

  1. (transitive) To add a gloss to (a text).
    Synonyms: annotate, mark up
Derived terms
Translations

Further reading

Anagrams

Portuguese

Etymology

Unadapted borrowing from English (lip) gloss.

Pronunciation

 
  • (Brazil) IPA(key): /ˈɡlɔ(j)s/ [ˈɡlɔ(ɪ̯)s]

  • Rhymes: (Brazil) -ɔs, (Portugal) -ɔʃ

Noun

gloss m (uncountable)

  1. lip gloss (cosmetic product)

Further reading