Any attempt to gloze the situation, he felt, would be futile.
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I would not gloze my crime, nor do I know How to address your worships.
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Official attempts to gloze over the incident would have been amusing if they were not pathetic.
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The relation of certain words in the original to the practice of my translation may require gloze.
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It would be, of course, possible to refine on and gloze over certain points of the teaching.
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You see, gloze it over as they may, one thing is clear, it is finished with England.
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Normally, spokesmen and chiefs of the Cabinet have the responsibility to gloze over the achievements of the government they represent.
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But if you had made a study of faces, your second glance would have cut through that gloze of oily, apologetic appeal.
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He knew his father never cared for him, though his mother tried her best to gloze over the indifference of her husband.
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At dark the old man lit two lamps, which served dimly to gloze the shadows, and thrust logs of wood into the cast-iron stove.
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They make a tasty gloze for the Christmas ham, are sure to pep up the turkey leftovers and make o great stocking filler for the man of the house.
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Starting in the 14th century, a gloze was a marginal note or explanation, borrowed from French glose, which comes from medieval Latin glōsa, classical glōssa, meaning an obsolete or foreign word that needs explanation.Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary, s.v. Later, it came to mean the explanation itself. The Latin word comes from Greek γλῶσσα 'tongue, language, obsolete or foreign word'.
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