degloried
English edit
Etymology edit
Adjective edit
degloried (comparative more degloried, superlative most degloried)
- (obsolete) Devoid of glory; dishonoured.
- 1610', Giles Fletcher, Christ's Victory and Triumph
- with thorns degloried
- 1654, John Bulwer, A View of the People of the Whole World:
- neither his ſoule nor body (both being ſo degloried ) by his own most accurſed deſigne ſince they came under his own tuition
- 1868, John Mason Neale, A commentary on the Psalms:
- O shamed One for the shamed, O Head degloried that I may henceforth be glorified
- 1610', Giles Fletcher, Christ's Victory and Triumph
Synonyms edit
References edit
- “degloried”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC.