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      • The word glamour comes to English from Scots, the English language as spoken in Scotland. In the early 1700s, the Scottish altered the English word grammar to create glamer or glamour; it meant "a magic spell."
      www.merriam-webster.com/wordplay/the-history-of-glamour
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  2. Mar 11, 2012 · In the first decades of the twentieth century, ‘glamour’, a term which became to be recognised as implying a form of feminine sophistication, luxury, excess and sexual power, became a more attainable and attractive way of dressing and living.

  3. The earliest known use of the noun glamour is in the early 1700s. OED's earliest evidence for glamour is from 1720, in the writing of Allan Ramsay, poet.

  4. May 10, 2018 · Founded in the US in 1939, it started out as a high-end publication sharing stories about the lives of film stars, originally titled Glamour of Hollywood. It changed its name to Glamour in 1943, as it began including more articles on fashion, beauty and then later psychology, health and wellbeing.

    • Sarah Dawood
    • How did glamour get its name?1
    • How did glamour get its name?2
    • How did glamour get its name?3
    • How did glamour get its name?4
    • How did glamour get its name?5
  5. OED's earliest evidence for glamour is from before 1801, in the writing of Richard Gall, poet. It is also recorded as a noun from the early 1700s. glamour is formed within English, by conversion.

  6. History. "Glamour" originally referred to a magic spell, an illusion said to be cast by witches. In the late 19th century terminology, a non-magical item used to help create a more attractive appearance gradually became known as 'a glamour'. [3]

  7. Jun 12, 2024 · From the 1940s on, our book chronicles how Glamour became a fighting force for women’s freedom—be it financial, reproductive, sexual, and more. Glamour was the first American fashion magazine ...

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