blear

Etymology 1
From, related to 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬. Perhaps also related to.

Adjective

 * 1)  ; unclear from water or rheum.
 * 2) Causing or caused by dimness of sight.
 * 1) Causing or caused by dimness of sight.
 * 1) Causing or caused by dimness of sight.

Translations

 * Bulgarian: ,
 * Polish: ,

Etymology 2
From, from.

Verb

 * 1)  To be blear; to have blear eyes; to look or gaze with blear eyes.
 * 2) * 18th c., attributed to, “The Story of Orpheus, Burlesqued,” in (ed.), The Works of Jonathan Swift, Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 2nd edition, 1883, Volume 10, p. 403,
 * Orpheus, a one-eyed blearing Thracian,
 * The crowder of that barb’rous nation,
 * Was ballad-singer by vocation;
 * 1) * 1917, Madge Morris, The “Red Wind Blows” in The Lure of the Desert Land and Other Poems, San Francisco: Har Wagner, p. 83,
 * Let loose thy snow-winged dove, to rise
 * And fly across the seething blood-mad world.
 * To flutter over fields where that dread Silence is!
 * To light on upturned faces blearing at the skies
 * And curiously peck at dead men’s eyes.
 * 1)  To make (usually the eyes or eyesight) blurred or dim.
 * 2) * 1584, Anonymous, Sonnet, in Clement Robinson et al., A Handefull of Pleasnt Delites, London: Richard Ihones, reprinted from the original edition for the Spenser Society, 1871, p. 52,
 * I Smile to ſee how you deuiſe,
 * New maſking nets my eies to bleare:
 * your ſelf you cannot ſo diſguiſe:
 * But as you are, you muſt appeare.
 * 1)  To blur, make blurry.
 * 2) * 1888,, “Babes of God” Part II in Poems, Boston: Lee & Shepard, p. 36,
 * Now, one among the foremost, looking up
 * By chance, with horror saw, in farthest sky
 * Fronting their course, a troublous film of cloud,—
 * A strange, dark, troublous film of cloud,—
 * Blearing the beauty of the crystal wall.
 * 1) * 1888,, “Babes of God” Part II in Poems, Boston: Lee & Shepard, p. 36,
 * Now, one among the foremost, looking up
 * By chance, with horror saw, in farthest sky
 * Fronting their course, a troublous film of cloud,—
 * A strange, dark, troublous film of cloud,—
 * Blearing the beauty of the crystal wall.
 * Blearing the beauty of the crystal wall.

Translations

 * Bulgarian:
 * Maori: whakamakaro
 * Polish: zamglić
 * Russian:

Etymology
From.

Adjective

 * 1)  much, a lot of