Definition of "gloze"
gloze
noun
plural glozes
A comment in the margin; explanatory note; gloss; commentary.
Quotations
The state of practice in the first half of the fifteenth century may be gathered from the gloze of Nicholas de Tudeschis, called Panormitan, on the text Ut quisque which we have quoted above.
1903, Cuthbert Atchley, The Parish Clerk, and his Right to Read the Liturgical Epistle, Alcuin Club Tracts IV, London: Longmans, Green & Co., p. 15
Quotations
(False) appearance.
Quotations
We have flattered thee, O Lord, with our tongues, and dissembled in our double hearts like the Israelites, whom thou hast fearfully punished in the sight of all the world, and saluted thee long with Judas kiss; to wit, with a vizard and show of religion, with the gloze of outward profession, drawing near thee with our lips, but our hearts far from thee […]
1585, John Aylmer, “A necessarie and godly prayer appoynted by the right reverend Father in God John, Bishop of London to be used throughout all his Dioces upon Sondayes and Frydayes, for the turning away of Gods Wrath”, in Two Forms of Prayer of the Time of Queen Elizabeth, Cambridge University Press, published 1876, page 12
Quotations
verb
third-person singular simple present glozes, present participle glozing, simple past and past participle glozed
(literary) To extenuate, explain away, gloss over.
Quotations
Of what were generative organs made? / And for what profit were those creatures wrought? / [...] / Gloze as you will and plead the explanation / That they were only made for the purgation / Of urine, little things of no avail / Except to know a female from a male […]
1951, Geoffrey Chaucer, translated by Nevill Coghill, The Canterbury Tales: Translated into Modern English (Penguin Classics), Penguin Books, published 1977, page 279
Quotations
[…] looke to see the throne where you should sit,To floate in bloud, and at thy wanton head,The glozing head of thy base minion throwne.
1594, Christopher Marlow[e], The Troublesome Raigne and Lamentable Death of Edward the Second, King of England: […], London: […] [R. Robinson] for William Iones […], (please specify the page)
So gloz’d the Tempter, and his Proem tun’d;Into the Heart of Eve his words made way,
1667, John Milton, “Book IX”, in Paradise Lost. […], London: […] [Samuel Simmons], and are to be sold by Peter Parker […]; [a]nd by Robert Boulter […]; [a]nd Matthias Walker, […]; republished as Paradise Lost in Ten Books: […], London: Basil Montagu Pickering […], 1873, lines 549-551
To smooth over; to palliate by specious explanation.
Quotations
On this ground it is that Christianity works its way in Christianizing a community—if only it have free scope. It does this, not by glozing the evil that is in the world; not by extenuating, or by exaggerating the damage which human nature has sustained; but it does so by raising, in all minds, the ideal of human nature […]
1860, Isaac Taylor, “Ultimate Civilization”, in Ultimate Civilization, and Other Essays, London: Bell & Daldy, page 37
The Brookers never called these biscuits biscuits. They always referred to them reverently as ‘cream crackers’—‘Have another cream cracker, Mr Reilly. You’ll like a cream cracker with your cheese’—thus glozing over the fact that there was only cheese for supper.
1937, George Orwell, The Road to Wigan Pier, Part I, Chapter 1