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glassier

Glassier is a rarely used English adjective describing something with a more glass-like appearance or quality than another object. It is not part of standard modern usage and is often replaced by glassy, or by the comparative form glossier for surfaces that are more polished and glossy. When used, glassier tends to appear in descriptive, literary, or experimental writing where authors wish to stress translucence, smoothness, or light reflection characteristic of glass.

Etymology and caution: Glassier is typically seen as an analogue of glassy formed with the -ier suffix,

Other uses: In proper nouns, Glassier may appear as a surname or as a fictional name in

See also: glass, glassy, glossier, glazier.

rather
than
as
a
historic
or
widely
attested
standard
form.
Because
of
its
rarity,
many
readers
may
interpret
it
as
either
a
neologism
or
a
stylistic
variant.
It
is
also
easy
to
confuse
with
glazier,
the
noun
for
a
glassworker,
which
is
unrelated
semantically.
literature
or
media.
There
are
no
widely
documented
places
or
organizations
named
Glassier
in
major
reference
works.
In
practice,
its
occurrence
as
a
capitalized
term
signals
a
specific,
possibly
invented,
designation
rather
than
a
general
concept.