different between glour vs clour

glour

English

Etymology

Regarding the spelling glour/glower, compare lour/lower.

Verb

glour (third-person singular simple present glours, present participle glouring, simple past and past participle gloured)

  1. Alternative spelling of glower.

Anagrams

  • orgul

glour From the web:

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clour

English

Etymology 1

From Middle English cloure (field).

Noun

clour (plural clours)

  1. (obsolete) A field.

Etymology 2

From Scots clour, from Old Norse klóra (to scrawl, scratch), klór (a scratching). Cognate with Icelandic klóra (to scratch), Norwegian klore (to scratch, scrawl).

Verb

clour (third-person singular simple present clours, present participle clouring, simple past and past participle cloured)

  1. (Scotland, transitive) To inflict a blow on; punch.
  2. (Scotland, transitive) To make a dent or bump on; ding.

Noun

clour (plural clours)

  1. (Scotland) A blow or impingement.

Scots

Alternative forms

  • cloor, clure, clowr, clower

Etymology

From Old Norse klóra (to scratch, scrawl). Noun is from Old Norse klór (a scratching).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?klu?r/, /?klu?r/

Noun

clour (plural clours)

  1. (archaic) A punch or blow.
  2. (archaic) A bump or bruise.
  3. (archaic) A dent.

Verb

clour (third-person singular present clours, present participle clourin, past clourt, past participle clourt)

  1. (archaic) To hit or cause a blow, to dent or disfigure.
  2. (archaic, poetic) To wrinkle or furrow.

clour From the web:

  • what color
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  • what colors make orange
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  • what colors make black
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