Word Meanings - GLEEN - Book Publishers vocabulary database
To glisten; to gleam. Prior.
Related words: (words related to GLEEN)
- PRIORSHIP
The state or office of prior; priorate. - PRIORITY
1. The quality or state of being prior or antecedent in time, or of preceding something else; as, priority of application. 2. Precedence; superior rank. Shak. Priority of debts, a superior claim to payment, or a claim to payment before others. - PRIORATE
The dignity, office, or government, of a prior. T. Warton. - GLISTEN
To sparkle or shine; especially, to shine with a mild, subdued, and fitful luster; to emit a soft, scintillating light; to gleam; as, the glistening stars. Syn. -- See Flash. (more info) glisnian, akin to E. glitter. See Glitter, v. i., and cf. - PRIORESS
A lady superior of a priory of nuns, and next in dignity to an abbess. - GLEAM
To disgorge filth, as a hawk. - GLEAMY
Darting beams of light; casting light in rays; flashing; coruscating. In brazed arms, that cast a gleamy ray, Swift through the town the warrior bends his way. Pope. - PRIORY
A religious house presided over by a prior or prioress; -- sometimes an offshoot of, an subordinate to, an abbey, and called also cell, and obedience. See Cell, 2. Note: Of such houses there were two sorts: one where the prior was chosen by the - PRIORLY
Previously. Geddes. - PRIOR
Preceding in the order of time; former; antecedent; anterior; previous; as, a prior discovery; prior obligation; -- used (more info) compar. corresponding to primus first, and pro for. See Former, and - SUBPRIOR
The vicegerent of a prior; a claustral officer who assists the prior. - AGLEAM
Gleaming; as, faces agleam. Lowell. - APRIORISM
An a priori principle. - APRIORITY
The quality of being innate in the mind, or prior to experience; a priori reasoning. - FOREGLEAM
An antecedent or premonitory gleam; a dawning light. The foregleams of wisdom. Whittier. - A PRIORI
Characterizing that kind of reasoning which deduces consequences from definitions formed, or principles assumed, or which infers effects from causes previously known; deductive or deductively. The reverse of a posteriori.