cloam

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Middle English *clom, from Old English clām (paste, mortar, mud, clay, poultice), from Proto-West Germanic *klaim, from Proto-Germanic *klaimaz (clay), from Proto-Indo-European *gleym- (to stick, smear). Related to cleam, claim, clem.

Noun

cloam (usually uncountable, plural cloams)

  1. (obsolete) Clay.
  2. (Now chiefly dialectal) Earthenware.

Derived terms

Adjective

cloam (comparative more cloam, superlative most cloam)

  1. (Now chiefly dialectal) Of earthenware.

Verb

cloam (third-person singular simple present cloams, present participle cloaming, simple past and past participle cloamed)

  1. (transitive, obsolete) To make cloam.
  2. (intransitive, UK dialectal) To gutter (as a candle).

Derived terms

  • cloamer

Anagrams

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