English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From glamour +‎ -some.

Adjective edit

glamoursome (comparative more glamoursome, superlative most glamoursome)

  1. Marked by glamour or glamorousness; glamorous
    • 2001, Wilfrid Howard Mellers, Wilfrid Mellers, Singing in the Wilderness:
      A swaggering ostinato on trombone suggests his glamoursome adventurousness, but Ray Nance's solo trumpet has a fallible wobble in its nobility (can Othello's tall tales be true?).
    • 2012, Lou Cameron, Stringer:
      You just proved my point by assuming a Frisco gal who posed for art students had to be all glamoursome.
    • 2012, Lou Cameron, Stringer and the Hanging Judge:
      “More like a glamoursome lady of fashion to a kid in pigtails,” Belle said. “My grandfather could be a real pain about female notions, as he called 'em.
    • 2015, C.S.E. Cooney, Bone Swans:
      No plan of mine could stand long against a brainstorming session spearheaded by Ulia Gol at her glamoursome best.