diamond / ˈdaɪ mənd, ˈdaɪ ə- /

⭐基础词汇钻石菱形菱角菱形的

diamond3 个定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. a pure or nearly pure, extremely hard form of carbon, naturally crystallized in the isometric system.
  2. a piece of this stone.
  3. a transparent, flawless or almost flawless piece of this stone, especially when cut and polished, valued as a precious gem.
adj. 形容词 adjective
  1. made of or set with a diamond or diamonds.
  2. having the shape of a diamond: a dress with a diamond print.
  3. indicating the 75th, or sometimes the 60th, event of a series, as a wedding anniversary.
v. 有主动词 verb
  1. to adorn with or as if with diamonds.

diamond 近义词

n. 名词 noun

gemstone

更多diamond例句

  1. The shiny, diamond-shaped pastries, each four-inch slice set off with an almond, were reason enough to head to its source.
  2. Zagreus is out collecting the necessary gemstones and diamonds for furnishings in the underworld, but the House Contractor assures us that all work will be safe and neither seen nor heard.
  3. Electric ones often have diamond-tipped metal pieces, which won’t wear out.
  4. In March, retired Pro Bowl running back Marshawn Lynch, for example, is launching Dodi Blunts — a “premium, crafted cannabis brand-platform” with 24-karat diamond-infused blunts.
  5. Your grandma’s diamond ring hasn’t morphed into super-stable graphite.
  6. Diamond Street, for instance, was one of the original players in the zoot suit riots in 1942.
  7. Elderly women played Triple Double Diamond and Tiki Magic while they chain-smoked.
  8. Casa Bruja is a diamond in the rough, a refuge among all this bedlam.
  9. But they are striving “to shine bright like a diamond” and be happy, and we love them for it.
  10. He took his diamond cutting practice to the United States in 1949 and settled in Houston with his wife, Ann.
  11. He just got a good holt–a shore enough diamond hitch–on that thirst-parlour dawg, and chawed.
  12. At last she had fallen asleep and dreamed ecstatic dreams about diamond necklaces and thousand franc notes.
  13. He was decently dressed in grey tweeds, and wore a diamond ring on his little finger.
  14. Later on he went to South Africa, where in the diamond mines he met with great success and made a large fortune.
  15. Joseph Mylchreest was a Manxman, a rough diamond but a man of sterling worth.