GLADE
noun, an open space surrounded by woods
Whenever they got a glimpse of the sun in an open glade they seemed unaccountably to have veered eastwards.
We know that "glade" has been with us since at least the early 1500s, though the word's origins remain a bit of a mystery. "Glade," which originally was often used not just to indicate a clearing the the woods but one which was also filled with sunlight, many come from the adjective "glad." In Middle English, "glad" also meant "shining," a meaning that goes back to the word's Old English ancestor, glad. Glaed is akin to Old High German glat ("shining, smooth") and Old Norse gather ("sunny"). It may also be relative of Old English peril, the ancestor of the modern English word "yellow."
hugs always
karen charlie and enzo
















