glean
التعريفات والمعاني
== English ==
=== Pronunciation ===
(Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ɡliːn/
(General American) IPA(key): /ɡlin/
Rhymes: -iːn
=== Etymology 1 ===
The verb is derived from Late Middle English glenen (“to gather (heads of grain left by reapers), glean; to gather (things) together, collect”), from Old French glener, glainer (modern French glaner (“to gather, glean”)), from Late Latin glen(n)are, the present active infinitive of glen(n)ō (“to make a collection”); further etymology uncertain, possibly from Gaulish, from Proto-Celtic *glanos (“clean; clear”, adjective), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *ǵʰleh₁- (“to glow, shine; to be glowing or shining”).
The noun is derived from Late Middle English glene (“collection of heads of grain gathered by gleaning; head of grain”), from Old French glene, glane (“act of gleaning; legal right to glean”) (modern French glane (“act of gleaning”)), from glener, glainer (verb): see above.
Cognate with Medieval Latin glana, glena (“bundle of ears of grain”).
==== Verb ====
glean (third-person singular simple present gleans, present participle gleaning, simple past and past participle gleaned)
(transitive)
To collect (fruit, grain, or other produce) from a field, an orchard, etc., after the main gathering or harvest.
Synonym: lease
(figurative)
To gather (something, now chiefly something intangible such as experience or information) in small amounts over a period of time, often with some difficulty; to scrape together.
Synonyms: extract, (of information) learn, wring
To take away (someone's) possessions; to strip (someone) bare.
(zoology) Of an animal, especially a bat or a bird: to feed by picking up or plucking (prey, mainly arthropods such as insects) from various places.
(obsolete) To collect or gather (things) into one mass.
(obsolete, military) To cut off (straggling soldiers separated from their units) during a conflict; to isolate.
(intransitive)
To collect fruit, grain, or other produce after the main gathering or harvest.
(zoology) Of an animal, especially a bat or a bird: to feed by picking up or plucking prey, mainly arthropods such as insects, from various places.
===== Conjugation =====
===== Derived terms =====
===== Translations =====
==== Noun ====
glean (plural gleans)
(obsolete except UK, dialectal) A collection of something made by gleaning.
=== Etymology 2 ===
Possibly a variant of clean (“(UK, dialectal; noun) the afterbirth of a cow or sheep; (verb) of a cow or sheep: to bring forth the afterbirth”), possibly from clean (“to remove dirt from an object or place”), referring to an animal’s uterus being cleaned out by the delivery of the afterbirth.
==== Noun ====
glean (plural gleans)
(obsolete) The afterbirth or placenta of an animal, especially a cow or sheep.
Synonyms: (UK, dialectal) clean, cleaning
==== Verb ====
glean (third-person singular simple present gleans, present participle gleaning, simple past and past participle gleaned)
(intransitive, obsolete) Of an animal, especially a cow or sheep: to deliver its afterbirth or placenta.
Synonym: (UK, dialectal) clean
=== Notes ===
=== References ===
=== Further reading ===
gleaning on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
gleaning (birds) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
“glean”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC.
=== Anagrams ===
-angle, Angel, Angle, Elgan, Galen, Lange, Legan, Nagle, agnel, angel, angle, genal, lenga
== Manx ==
=== Noun ===
glean m
eclipsed form of clean
=== Mutation ===