¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Loomed
1. loom [v] - See also: loom
Lexicographical Neighbors of Loomed
Literary usage of Loomed
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Selections from the Judicial Records of Renfrewshire: Illustrative of the by William Hector (1876)
"... narrow loomed cloath contrair " to Law." Up to a comparatively recent period,
when the Weights and Measures Acts of Geo. IV. and Wm. IV. were passed, ..."
2. The Library of Literary Criticism of English and American Authors by Charles Wells Moulton (1904)
"And then Browning loomed on the horizon, surely the brawniest neo-Elizabethan
Titan whom our age has seen, and whom it has latterly chosen to adore. ..."
3. The Æneid of Virgil by Virgil (1910)
"An aged ash-tree, as he fixes firm His feet in earth and hides his brows in
cloud; — So loomed Mezentius with his ponderous arms. To match him now, ^Eneas, ..."
4. Life in Danbury: Being a Brief But Comprehensive Record of the Doings of a by James Montgomery Bailey (1873)
"The giant loomed up through the fog and misery like a wart on a popular man's nose.
The clown retired to the recesses of the dressing room and wrung himself ..."
5. Cyclopædia of Wit and Humor by Wayne E. Burton (1868)
"He has plunged with the impetus wild of a lover, And the tub has loomed large,
balanced, paused, and turned over ! The Tiger at first had a hobby-horse-ride ..."
6. A History of the Baptists: Traced by Their Vital Principles and Practices by Thomas Armitage (1887)
"On his right Gilead loomed up in majesty, on his left Tabor and Hormon, but he
saw no glory of Transfiguration. He saw not a foot-mark of the Lamb of God in ..."
7. The Sunday Magazine by Thomas Guthrie, William Garden Blaikie, Benjamin Waugh (1869)
"... Carmel, loomed in drear sublimity ! 0 ! wondrous Boy, whose eyes divine gazed
on this tranquil scene, Thy dreams upon a mother's breast, the blood-red ..."