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Answer for the clue "Cosmopolitan competitor ", 7 letters:
glamour

Alternative clues for the word glamour

Word definitions for glamour in dictionaries

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 (context countable English) an item, motif, person, image that by association improves appearance 2 witchcraft; magic charm; a spell affecting the eye, making objects appear different from what they really are. 3 A kind of haze in the air, causing ...

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1814, from glamour (n.). Related: Glamoured ; glamouring .

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
For other meanings, see Glamour (disambiguation) . See also Fashion . Glamour originally was a term applied to a magical-occult spell that was cast on somebody to make them see something the spell-caster wished them to see, when in fact it was not what ...

Usage examples of glamour.

Queen of Sheba, Such serious questions bringing, That merry rascal Solomon Would show a sober face: -- And then again Pavlova To set our spirits singing, The snowy-swan bacchante All glamour, glee and grace.

Bedford Row are Hogarthian in type, tall, symmetrical, with the glamour of better days upon them.

His favored glamour is that of an intensely sexual Highland blacksmith with a powerful rippling body, golden skin, long black hair, and dark, mesmerizing eyes Highly intelligent, lethally seductive.

Hollywood, the glamour capital of the world, here is Johnny Whistler and his Movieland Report.

And the Nonmen cast a glamour about Min-Uroikas so that it would remain forever hidden.

Touching these solemn ancientries, and there, The silent River ranging tide-mark high And the callow, grey-faced Hospital, With the strange glimmer and glamour of a dream!

The shards that sparkled in its diamante fur lent it an air of ostentatious glamour.

When her son, who was then a baby, had grown up he received word in some way, not handed down, that his mother was glamoured by faeries, and imprisoned for the time in a house in Glasgow and longing to see him.

It was all very beautiful, but one comes in time to regard mortal glamours rather as the Cathars regarded them, snares of the Devil to hide the blemishes beneath, to make us love a world which will defile and betray us.

With Nick, Liysa had gotten a taste of moviemaking and the glamour of associating with people from Hollywood.

Priscilla Mullens, whom the glamour of unfounded romance and the pen of the poet Longfellow have made one of the best known and best beloved of the Pilgrim band, was either a little older, or younger, than her brother Joseph, it is not certain which.

Rome the holy, which thus strives to make all men pederasts, denies the fact, and will not believe in the effects of the glamour of her own devising.

Not to the rolling hills of Virginia or the space centers of Houston or Canaveral, nor to the glamour of Los Angeles nor the perpetual nightlife of New York, but to a simple two-bedroom condo in northwest San Francisco, proximate not to power brokers and politicos but to panhandlers, prostitutes, tourists, illegal immigrants, and the best Chinese food in North America.

Enderby eyed her bitterly, trying to look like disguised Rosalind in some ridiculous black trendy production of As You Like It, that was to say in peaked corduroy cap and patched boilersuit, but breathing very quintessence of elegance and glamour.

It was perhaps in this glamour, or this feeling of commercial solidarity, that March went to have a look at the Hamburg Bourse, in the beautiful new Rathhaus.