Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
Sloom
Sloom
,Noun.
Slumber.
[Prov. Eng.]
Webster 1828 Edition
Sloom
SLOOM
,Noun.
Definition 2024
sloom
sloom
English
Alternative forms
- sloum
Noun
sloom (plural slooms)
Derived terms
Etymology 2
From Middle English slumen, slummen, from Old English *slūmian (“to slumber, sleep gently”), from Proto-Germanic *slūm- (“to be slack, loose, or limp”), from Proto-Indo-European *(s)lew- (“limp, flabby”).
Alternative forms
- sloum, sleam
Verb
sloom (third-person singular simple present slooms, present participle slooming, simple past and past participle sloomed)
- (Scotland, obsolete) To sleep lightly, to doze, to nod; to be half-asleep.
- 1886, Amelia Edith Huddleston Barr, The Squire of Sandal-Side A Pastoral Romance:
- The squire sloomed and slept in his chair; and finally, after a cup of tea, went to bed.
- a. 1853, Jane Ermina Locke, "Elia", in The Recalled: In Voices of the Past, and Poems of the Ideal, James Munroe and Company (1854), page 193:
- To his castle’s portal, / At the morning gloaming, / Bore they all the mortal / From the battle’s foaming, / Of the white bannered warrior knight, / Cold in his armor slooming!
- 1900, Amelia Edith Huddleston Barr, The Maid of Maiden lane, Dodd, Mead and Company, page 181:
- Then the doctor was slooming and nodding, and waking up and saying a word or two, and relapsing again into semi-unconsciousness.
- 1936, Esmond Quinterley, Ushering Interlude, The Fortune Press, page 66:
- The afternoon sun painted amber patterns on the Turkey red hearthrug: the only splash of colour in the dun room. Potter sloomed in the arms of the chair.
- 2001, Gemma O'Connor, Walking on Water, Berkley Publishing Group (2003), ISBN 978-0-515-13597-8, page 205:
- He lay slooming half-asleep, half-awake, thinking about Tuesday afternoon.
-
- (of plants or soil) To soften or rot with damp.
- a. 1807, unidentified young farmer, letter to his father, printed in Edinburgh Farmers’ Magazine 1807, reprinted in The Farmer’s Register, Volume 7, Number 9 (1839 September 30), page 540:
- He adds, that one hundred bolls, or fifty quarters of wheat may be thrashed in a day of eight hours, unless the grain has been sloomed or mildewed; […]
- 1824 August, “Remarks on Captian Napier's Essay on Store-Farming”, in The Farmer’s Magazine, Volume XXV, Archibald Constable and Company (publishers), page 329:
- […] no other spot over their whole pastured offered as much verdure at this time as these seemingly sloomed places.
- c. 1854, Alexander J. Main, “Experiments with Special Manures”, in Transactions of the Highland and Agricultural Society of Scotland, W. Blackwood & Sons (1855), page 17:
- It must be explained, however, that in the latter case the “slooming” of the crop had an injurious effect on its yield; […]
- a. 1807, unidentified young farmer, letter to his father, printed in Edinburgh Farmers’ Magazine 1807, reprinted in The Farmer’s Register, Volume 7, Number 9 (1839 September 30), page 540:
References
- Jamieson's Dictionary of the Scottish language (1867)
- sloom in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913
- Dictionary of the Scots Language, “sloom”
Anagrams
Dutch
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /sloːm/
- Rhymes: -oːm
Adjective
sloom (comparative slomer, superlative sloomst)
Inflection
Inflection of sloom | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
uninflected | sloom | |||
inflected | slome | |||
comparative | slomer | |||
positive | comparative | superlative | ||
predicative/adverbial | sloom | slomer | het sloomst het sloomste |
|
indefinite | m./f. sing. | slome | slomere | sloomste |
n. sing. | sloom | slomer | sloomste | |
plural | slome | slomere | sloomste | |
definite | slome | slomere | sloomste | |
partitive | slooms | slomers | — |