Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. adjective. us / ˈɡlæm·ə·rəs / Add to word list. exciting and attractive: glamorous fashion models. a glamorous job. (Definition of glamorous from the Cambridge Academic Content Dictionary © Cambridge University Press) Examples of glamorous. glamorous.

  2. The meaning of GLAMOROUS is full of glamour : excitingly attractive. How to use glamorous in a sentence.

  3. adjective. us / ˈɡlæm.ə.əs / uk / ˈɡlæm. ə r.əs / (also mainly UK informal glam) Add to word list. attractive in an exciting and special way: a glamorous woman/ outfit. a glamorous job. She was looking very glamorous. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Attractive. adorable. adorably. adorbs. aesthetically. delicate. disarmingly.

  4. Glamorous means full of glamour, beauty, and excitement. Glamorous comes from the Scottish gramarye meaning "magic, enchantment, spell." See a glamorous woman walking down the street and you might be captivated or enchanted by her beauty.

  5. glamorous. adjective. These are words and phrases related to glamorous. Click on any word or phrase to go to its thesaurus page. Or, go to the definition of glamorous. Jean Harlow was a glamorous movie star of the 1930's. Synonyms. fascinating. charming. bewitching. enchanting. dazzling. captivating. alluring. attractive. exciting. magnetic.

  6. Definition of glamorous adjective in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  7. full of glamour; charmingly or fascinatingly attractive, especially in a mysterious or magical way. Synonyms: bewitching, alluring, fascinating, beguiling. full of excitement, adventure, and unusual activity: the glamorous job of a foreign correspondent. glamorous.

  8. If you describe someone or something as glamorous, you mean that they are more attractive, exciting, or interesting than ordinary people or things.

  9. Synonyms for GLAMOROUS: exotic, picturesque, colorful, fantastical, marvellous, romantic, marvelous, strange; Antonyms of GLAMOROUS: unglamorous, unromantic, familiar, plain-Jane, unexotic, nonexotic, nonglamorous, repulsive.

  10. The earliest known use of the adjective glamorous is in the 1830s. OED's earliest evidence for glamorous is from 1838, in the writing of William Herbert, antiquary and librarian. glamorous is formed within English, by derivation.

  1. Searches related to Glamorous

    Glamorous meaning