emerald

listen to the pronunciation of emerald
English - Turkish
zümrüt

Bazı durumlarda, zümrütler elmaslardan daha değerli olabilir. - In some cases, emeralds can be worth more than diamonds.

Tom bir elmas ve bir zümrüt arasındaki farkı bilmiyor. - Tom does not know the difference between a diamond and an emerald.

zümrüt yeşili
Emerald işle: İrlanda
(matb.) altı ile yedi punto arasındaki ufak harfler
zümrüt gibi yeşil
altı ile yedi punto arasındaki ufak harfler
zümrüt rengi
Emerald Isle Irlanda
zümrüt ile ilgili
zümrüt gibi

Zümrüt gibi gözleri var. - He has eyes like emeralds.

emerald isle
irlanda
emerald city
zömrüt şehri
emerald cut
kesim zümrüt
Emerald Isle
{i} İrlanda
Emerald Isle
(isim) İrlanda
emerald green
zümrüt yeşili
scarlet emerald
kırmızı zümrüt
English - English
A town in Queensland, Australia
A female given name

Mrs. Emerald Walsh was helping out at the presbytery.

Any of various green gemstones, especially a green transparent form of beryl, highly valued as a precious stone
emerald green
Of a rich green colour
An emerald is a precious stone which is clear and bright green
{n} a gem, a kind of green precious stone
Green [See VERT ]
{i} green precious stone
brightly or richly green
a transparent piece of emerald that has been cut and polished and is valued as a precious gem
Something that is emerald is bright green in colour. an emerald valley. Grass-green variety of beryl that is highly valued as a gemstone. Its physical properties are those of beryl. Its refractive and dispersive powers (i.e., its capacity to deflect light and to break white light into its component colours) are not high, so cut stones display little brilliancy or fire (flashes of colour). The colour that gives this gem its value is due to the presence of small amounts of chromium. The most important production of fine quality gem material is from Colombia; emeralds are also mined in Russia, Australia, South Africa, and Zimbabwe. Synthetic emeralds are identical to natural crystals and may rival them in colour and beauty
A kind of type, in size between minion and nonpare&?;l
Of a rich green color, like that of the emerald
It is used by English printers
Great harmonizer Love, balance, understanding Promotes creativity, stimulates perception and insight, and strengthen memory Beneficial effect on the eyes Physical and emotional healing This is the strongest physical healing gemstone that I know Placing it on the area which needs healing or wearing it around my neck Emerald is the carrier of the green ray Heart stone PLANET: Venus
Emeralds are a very hard, green precious stone (beryl, Be3Al2Si6O18, colored by chromium and some vanadium impurities) Flaws and cloudiness (called jardin) are very common in emeralds, so many emeralds are oiled, irradiatied,and dyed to improve their look Synthetic emeralds (developed by Carroll Chatham in the 1930's) have fewer imperfections and are very hard to distinguish from natural emeralds Emeralds belong the beryl group of stones which also includes aquamarines, morganite, and chrysoberyl) Emeralds have a hardness of 7-8 and a specific gravity of 2 6 - 2 8 Emerald (and all forms of beryl) have large, perfect, six-sided crystals Emeralds were long thought to have healing powers, especially for eyesight During the renaissance, emeralds were used as a test for friendship among the aristocracy; an emerald given to a friend would remain perfect as long as the friendship endured
A rich green colour, like that of the gem
A precious stone of a rich green color, a variety of beryl
A Distributor who has personally sponsored three distributors who have reached the direct level
the green color of an emerald a transparent piece of emerald that has been cut and polished and is valued as a precious gem a green transparent form of beryl; highly valued as a gemstone
a green transparent form of beryl; highly valued as a gemstone
A gemstone of the beryl family, fine emeralds are among the most valuable gemstones Unlike most gemstones, flaws (called inclusions by gemologists )are quite common in emeralds, so they lower the value much less than with other precious stones such a diamonds The most highly prized emeralds are mined in Columbia A valuable emerald will be a bright, vividly colored green Those with a slight blue cast to the bright green are actually the most valuable color Many emeralds seen in jewelry are of relatively low quality They are often dyed or oiled to improve the color and minimize flaws If an emerald appears to be very fine, it may actually be a synthetic There are several types of synthetic emeralds on the market, and some of them are challenging to identify, even for a trained gemologist
Seedless hybrid table grape that is one of the parents, along with the Athens variety, of the Marquis cool-climate wine/table grape
the green color of an emerald
may
Emerald Isle
A nickname for Ireland

The cause, or the men, of the Emerald Isle.

emerald green
A rich green colour, like that of an emerald

emerald green colour:.

emerald green
Of a rich green colour, like that of an emerald
emerald city
The Emerald City is the fictional capital city of the Land of Oz in L. Frank Baum's Oz books, first described in The Wonderful Wizard of Oz
emerald cut
A rectangular cut for a gem having a series of parallel facets on each side and at each corner
Emerald Buddha
holy jade statue of Buddha that was carved during the 15th century (housed in the Bangkok, Thailand)
Emerald Isle
{i} Ireland (nickname due to its green countryside)
Emerald Isle
a name for Ireland, used in literature, often humorously. It is called this because the countryside is very green
emerald shiner
small blunt-nosed fish of Great Lakes and Mississippi valley with a greenish luster
red emerald
Bixbite (also known as red beryl, red emerald, or scarlet emerald) is a red variety of beryl (emerald), Be3(Al,Mn)2(SiO3)6. It was named after the Utah mineral collector Maynard Bixby, and should not be confused with the similarly named bixbyite
scarlet emerald
Bixbite (also known as red beryl, red emerald, or scarlet emerald) is a red variety of beryl (emerald), Be3(Al,Mn)2(SiO3)6. It was named after the Utah mineral collector Maynard Bixby, and should not be confused with the similarly named bixbyite
An emerald
emeraud
An emerald
smaragd
The emerald
smaragd
emeralds
plural of emerald
emerald

    Hyphenation

    Em·er·ald

    Turkish pronunciation

    emrıld

    Pronunciation

    /ˈemrəld/ /ˈɛmrəld/

    Etymology

    [ 'em-r&ld, 'e-m&- ] (noun.) 14th century. From Middle English emeraude Old French esmeraude Vulgar Latin *esmaralda, *esmaraldus, variant of Latin smaragdus, Ancient Greek σμάραγδος, μάραγδος (maragdos) Sanskrit मरकत (marakata).
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