See also: gelasma

Translingual edit

 

Etymology edit

Coined by William Warren in 1893 from Ancient Greek γέλασμα (gélasma, smile or laughter)

Proper noun edit

Gelasma f

  1. (archaic) A taxonomic genus within the family Geometridae – moths, now Maxates.

Hypernyms edit

References edit

English edit

Etymology edit

gelasma

Proper noun edit

Gelasma

  1. Laughter personified.
    • 1900, The Quarterly Review, volume 192:
      Charles Lamb worshipped, like the Spartans in Edgar Poe's story, at the mysterious shrine of the god Gelasma.
    • 1910, Francis Thompson, A Renegade Poet:
      ...the temple to the reigning goddess Gelasma, which mocks the name of theatre...
    • 1950, Philip Hughes, edited by George Andrew Beck, The English Catholics, 1850-1950:
      So was a generation bred, more and more incapable of serious reading, of serious reflection, even of a primitive kind. Francis Thompson, a shrewd observer of his age, noted and shuddered at the growing popularity of the new goddess, Gelasma.