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#glamour
the-glamour-vault · 2 days
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tinyslapper-4-sba · 3 days
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@submissive-sarah ❤️
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paymetea · 2 days
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Azizi Johari for Player’s Magazine (1978)
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devdas5z · 3 days
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Dove Cameron
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miamaimania · 6 hours
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✨ Nicola Waymouth dazzles in Ossie Clark's ethereal design ➤ 1971
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Anna May Wong
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tex6689 · 2 days
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bestbikinigirls · 1 day
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HANNAH WADDINGHAM at the 81st Golden Globes Awards on January 7th 2024 in Los Angeles wearing UNKNOWN
Hannah looked great in this black lace dress. I thought this was perfectly tailored and an absolute beautiful dress. It was so flattering and really highlighted Hannah’s figure. It was a cool look!
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femmemonologue · 2 days
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“There’s a lot of power and responsibility that comes with owning who you are as a woman.” — Mia Goth.
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johnny69150 · 18 hours
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Emma Watson au concert de Adèle
#emmawatson #adele
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noosphe-re · 2 days
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Etymology of 'glamour (n.)'
1715, glamer, Scottish, "magic, enchantment" (especially in phrase to cast the glamour), a variant of Scottish gramarye "magic, enchantment, spell," said to be an alteration of English grammar (q.v.) in a specialized use of that word's medieval sense of "any sort of scholarship, especially occult learning," the latter sense attested from c. 1500 in English but said to have been more common in Medieval Latin.
It was popularized in English by the writings of Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832). The sense of "magical beauty, alluring charm" is recorded by 1840. As that quality of attractiveness especially associated with Hollywood, high-fashion, celebrity, etc., by 1939.
Jamieson's 1825 supplement to his "Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language" has glamour-gift "the power of enchantment; metaph. applied to female fascination." Jamieson's original edition (1808) looked to Old Norse for the source of the word. Zoëga's Old Icelandic dictionary has glám-sýni "illusion," probably from the same root as gleam.
Etymonline
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Gloria DeHaven
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abnormes · 2 months
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Jane Fonda, Walk on the Wild Side (1962)
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