Definitions

from The Century Dictionary.

  • noun A gleam or flash of light; a glow or glowing.
  • To gleam; shine; glow.
  • noun Same as lime.
  • noun A drain; a cut; in the fen district, a watercourse.
  • To separate or remove the shell or husk from (nuts); shell; husk.
  • To become separated from the shell, as nuts; to separate easily from the shell or husk.
  • noun The shell or husk of a nut.

from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.

  • noun obsolete See leme.
  • noun A cord or strap for leading a dog.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun A cord or strap for leading a dog.
  • verb intransitive, UK, dialectal To gleam; shine; glow.
  • noun UK, dialectal A gleam or flash of light; a glow or glowing.

Etymologies

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

See leamer, lien.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

From Middle English leme, from Old English lēoma ("ray of light, beam, radiance, gleam, glare, lightning"), from Proto-Germanic *leuhmô (“light, shine”), from Proto-Indo-European *leuk- (“light, bright”). Cognate with Icelandic ljómi ("gleam, ray, beam, flash of light"), Latin lumen ("light").

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

From Middle English lemen, from Old English lȳman, *līeman ("to shine"), from Proto-Germanic *leuhmijanan (“to shine”), from Proto-Indo-European *leuk- (“light, bright”). Cognate with Icelandic ljóma ("to glow"), Latin luminō ("light up").

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Examples

  • She might even leam to communicate with her opposite in Phaze.

    Here There Are Monsters 2010

  • 'Corn observed them covertly, hoping to leam something that might be useful in his relationship with Nepe.

    Here There Are Monsters 2010

  • Later they might round up and question all serfs in the vicinity, and leam that Bane had been seen leaving, but by then it would be far too late.

    Here There Are Monsters 2010

  • This be why none o 'us may contact other beyond the demarked region, lest they leam things illicitly.' '

    Here There Are Monsters 2010

  • He might leam the secret, but it would spoil her fun.

    Here There Are Monsters 2010

  • "She has to leam adult usage some time," he pointed out, amused.

    Here There Are Monsters 2010

  • Blue's experimental community had turned out the smartest androids yet, by making them small and letting them grow and leam in the human manner.

    Here There Are Monsters 2010

  • How am I ever going to even live long enough to leam it all?

    Tran Siberian Michael J. Solender 2010

  • The cities and the creatures of the wild shall leam to coexist.

    Here There Are Monsters 2010

  • That way I could leam it without giving away my hiding place.

    Here There Are Monsters 2010

Comments

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  • a archaic form of the word 'gleam'

    March 26, 2009

  • Twilight's last leaming.

    March 26, 2009

  • A synonym, not a form. The similarity of the spelling of the words in Modern English is deceptive: they are from unrelated Old English léoma and glǽm.

    March 26, 2009