Recent Examples on the Web
The Magnificent Jewels auction, which will take at Sotheby’s New York on June 8, includes a dazzling 10.57-carat pink diamond that could set a new price-per-carat record for its type.
—Rachel Cormack, Robb Report, 5 Apr. 2023
In the first photo, Long is seen excitingly embracing Bosworth, who smiles widely while holding up her left hand, which shimmers with a giant diamond.
—Rosa Sanchez, Harper’s BAZAAR, 5 Apr. 2023
Presenter Pedro Pascal wore two Serpenti rings, while Angela Bassett, Cara Delevingne and Phoebe Waller-Bridge all gleamed in high-jewelry Serpenti necklaces sparkling with diamonds and emeralds.
—Degen Pener, The Hollywood Reporter, 4 Apr. 2023
In honor of the milestone, the singer upgraded his wife’s engagement ring with a new diamond.
—Desiree Ossandon, Peoplemag, 31 Mar. 2023
The necklace looks more like a sculpture than a wearable jewel, with 2,473 diamonds that reportedly took two years to source.
—Kristen Shirley, Travel + Leisure, 30 Mar. 2023
Together, the duo share a natural rapport that sparkles like a diamond — and cuts like one too.
—Courtney Howard, Variety, 29 Mar. 2023
The Gaineses expanded the district to include a church, a small baseball diamond, several shops, Magnolia Press coffee and the Silos Baking Co. Magnolia Press coffee will operate in a mezzanine area and lounge.
—Maria Halkias, Dallas News, 29 Mar. 2023
The polished stainless-steel case is set with 28 brilliant-cut diamonds.
—Anthony Demarco, Forbes, 27 Mar. 2023
Instead, they were drawn to the idea that diamonds represent authenticity.
—Andrew E. Kramer, New York Times, 11 July 2018
The Del Paso Youth Baseball league has not used the Johnston Park diamonds in two years, according to a staff report.
—Anita Chabria, sacbee, 24 Apr. 2017
They are accused of burglarizing Tustin Village Jewelers, Diamonds Direct in Laguna Hills, Nick’s Jewelry and Watch Craft in Fullerton and Mimi’s Jewelry and Ballard and Ballard Jewelry in Fountain Valley.
—Orange County Register, 20 Jan. 2017
Barry Chin/Globe Staff When Oneil Cruz followed with a grounder to first, first baseman Triston Casas eschewed the sure out and instead elected to make a cross-diamond throw in hopes of getting the lead runner.
—Alex Speier, BostonGlobe.com, 5 Apr. 2023
The second most popular non-diamond gemstone?
—Nicole Kliest, refinery29.com, 10 Mar. 2022
Meanwhile, non-diamond engagement rings also trending in 2022, with sapphire being the second most popular gemstone after moissanite.
—Pema Bakshi, refinery29.com, 18 Aug. 2022
The Alpine Eagle Frozen is fully set, which means even the bracelet is completely paved with diamonds – there is no non-diamond-bracelet option.
—Carol Besler, Forbes, 22 Dec. 2021
Diamond experts say the gem could be the 10th-largest ever discovered and initially pegged its value at $50 million.
—Alpha Kamara, USA TODAY, 4 July 2017
Diamond’s facility in the county is Pump Station #1 in San Diego, where large-scale waterfalls help dilute the wastewater entering the treatment plant.
—Kristina Davis, sandiegouniontribune.com, 3 June 2017
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These examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word ‘diamond.’ Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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- British
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This shows grade level based on the word’s complexity.
[ dahy-muhnd, dahy—uh— ]
/ ˈdaɪ mənd, ˈdaɪ ə- /
This shows grade level based on the word’s complexity.
noun
a pure or nearly pure, extremely hard form of carbon, naturally crystallized in the isometric system.
a piece of this stone.
a transparent, flawless or almost flawless piece of this stone, especially when cut and polished, valued as a precious gem.
a ring or other piece of jewelry containing such a precious stone, especially an engagement ring.
a piece of this stone used in a drill or cutting tool.
a tool provided with such an uncut stone, used for cutting glass.
crystallized carbon, or a piece of it, artificially produced.
an equilateral quadrilateral, especially as placed with its diagonals vertical and horizontal; a lozenge or rhombus.
any rhombus-shaped figure or object oriented with its diagonals vertical and horizontal.
a red rhombus-shaped figure on a playing card.
a card of the suit bearing such figures.
diamonds, (used with a singular or plural verb) the suit so marked: Diamonds is trump. Diamonds are trump.
Baseball.
- the space enclosed by home plate and the three bases; infield.
- the entire playing field.
Printing. a 4½-point type of a size between brilliant and pearl.
adjective
made of or set with a diamond or diamonds.
having the shape of a diamond: a dress with a diamond print.
indicating the 75th, or sometimes the 60th, event of a series, as a wedding anniversary.
verb (used with object)
to adorn with or as if with diamonds.
QUIZ
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Which sentence is correct?
Idioms about diamond
diamond in the rough, a person of fine character but lacking refined manners or graces.
Origin of diamond
1275–1325; Middle English diamant<Old French <Vulgar Latin *diamant-, stem of *diamas, perhaps alteration of *adimas (>French aimant magnet, Old Provençal aziman diamond, magnet), for Latin adamasadamant, diamond
OTHER WORDS FROM diamond
dia·mond·like, adjective
Words nearby diamond
diametrical, diametrically, diamide, diamine, diammonium phosphate, diamond, diamond anniversary, diamondback, diamondback moth, diamondback rattlesnake, diamondback terrapin
Other definitions for diamond (2 of 2)
Diamond
[ dahy-muhnd, dahy—uh— ]
/ ˈdaɪ mənd, ˈdaɪ ə- /
noun
Neil, born 1941, U.S. singer and songwriter.
Cape, a hill in Canada, in S Quebec, on the St. Lawrence River.
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
MORE ABOUT DIAMOND
What does diamond mean?
A diamond is a clear gemstone known for its use in jewelry and its high price.
The word diamond can also refer to the material, which is one of the hardest known substances. It has many practical and industrial applications, including for grinding and polishing—many drill bits have diamond tips, for example.
Diamonds are perhaps the most popular gemstone used in jewelry. They are classified as precious gems, meaning that they have a high commercial value. They are often rated based on four main qualities: cut, color, clarity, and carat weight. Many cut diamonds are crystal clear, but sometimes they come in other transparent colors, including pink, yellow, and blue (like the famous Hope diamond). Some diamonds are synthetic—they’re manufactured in laboratories.
The diamond is the traditional birthstone for the month of April. It’s associated with the zodiac signs Aries and Taurus.
The word diamond is also used to refer to a shape (♦), like the one that’s used as one of the four “suits” on playing cards. Sometimes, it refers to a shape that looks like a cut diamond gem. This is how the word is used in baseball diamond.
Diamond can be used as an adjective to describe things that include diamonds (as in a diamond necklace), are made of diamond (as in a diamond drill bit tip), or are diamond-shaped or diamond-patterned, among other things.
The word diamond is sometimes used to describe a 75-year anniversary, as in It’s my grandparents’ diamond anniversary this year—I can’t believe they’ve been married for 75 years!
Example: Look at her ring—that must be the biggest diamond I’ve ever seen!
Where does diamond come from?
Etymologically speaking, the word diamond comes from the Latin adamas, meaning “hard metal” or “diamond.” It ultimately comes from Greek work that perhaps meant “unconquerable”—a reference to its famed hardness—from the prefix a-, meaning “not,” and damân, meaning “to tame” or “conquer.” The first records of the word diamond come from the late 1200s.
Naturally speaking, diamond is the purest form of carbon. Diamonds are formed under conditions of extreme temperature and pressure. They are most commonly found in volcanic rock. Only a small percentage of diamonds are suitable for cutting into gemstones. Poorly formed ones are used in abrasives and in industrial cutting tools.
The modern popularity of diamonds is often traced in part to a 1950s marketing campaign to associate them with engagement rings. Despite diamonds’ popularity, price, and reputation for rareness, many other precious gems are just as rare or even rarer.
Did you know … ?
How is diamond used in real life?
Due to their popularity in expensive jewelry, diamonds are associated with wealth and luxury. However, because diamond mining has a history that’s associated with exploitation of workers in war-torn areas, some people avoid diamonds or only purchase ones that are classified as “conflict-free.”
Meghan Markle’s engagement ring has a diamond from the second biggest supplier of conflict-free diamonds — here are the best countries to buy diamonds from https://t.co/4PglNK86ev pic.twitter.com/Jt5RNyTAY0
— Business Insider (@BusinessInsider) May 3, 2018
India is set to become a major hub for the production as well as the processing of lab-grown diamonds and already accounts for about a quarter of global lab-grown diamond output. https://t.co/liWQnKlahK
— The Business of Fashion (@BoF) March 21, 2021
The world’s most expensive diamond sold for $48.4 million USD.https://t.co/9Tm4uCs5ip pic.twitter.com/ySXCSodFSm
— HYPEBEAST (@HYPEBEAST) November 14, 2015
Try using diamond!
True or False?
Diamonds are the rarest of all precious stones.
Words related to diamond
gem, jewel, rhinestone, allotrope, corundum, ice, lozenge, paragon, rhombus, rock, solitaire, zircon, bort, brilliant, jager
How to use diamond in a sentence
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The shiny, diamond-shaped pastries, each four-inch slice set off with an almond, were reason enough to head to its source.
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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.
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Electric ones often have diamond-tipped metal pieces, which won’t wear out.
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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.
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Your grandma’s diamond ring hasn’t morphed into super-stable graphite.
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Diamond Street, for instance, was one of the original players in the zoot suit riots in 1942.
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Elderly women played Triple Double Diamond and Tiki Magic while they chain-smoked.
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Casa Bruja is a diamond in the rough, a refuge among all this bedlam.
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But they are striving “to shine bright like a diamond” and be happy, and we love them for it.
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He took his diamond cutting practice to the United States in 1949 and settled in Houston with his wife, Ann.
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He just got a good holt–a shore enough diamond hitch–on that thirst-parlour dawg, and chawed.
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At last she had fallen asleep and dreamed ecstatic dreams about diamond necklaces and thousand franc notes.
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He was decently dressed in grey tweeds, and wore a diamond ring on his little finger.
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Later on he went to South Africa, where in the diamond mines he met with great success and made a large fortune.
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Joseph Mylchreest was a Manxman, a rough diamond but a man of sterling worth.
British Dictionary definitions for diamond
noun
- a colourless exceptionally hard mineral (but often tinted yellow, orange, blue, brown, or black by impurities), found in certain igneous rocks (esp the kimberlites of South Africa). It is used as a gemstone, as an abrasive, and on the working edges of cutting tools. Composition: carbon. Formula: C. Crystal structure: cubic
- (as modifier)a diamond ring Related adjective: diamantine
geometry
- a figure having four sides of equal length forming two acute angles and two obtuse angles; rhombus
- (modifier) rhombic
- a red lozenge-shaped symbol on a playing card
- a card with one or more of these symbols or (when plural) the suit of cards so marked
baseball
- the whole playing field
- the square formed by the four bases
(formerly) a size of printer’s type approximately equal to 4 1/2 point
black diamond a figurative name for coal
rough diamond
- an unpolished diamond
- a person of fine character who lacks refinement and polish
verb
(tr) to decorate with or as with diamonds
Derived forms of diamond
diamond-like, adjective
Word Origin for diamond
C13: from Old French diamant, from Medieval Latin diamas, modification of Latin adamas the hardest iron or steel, diamond; see adamant
Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition
© William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins
Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
Scientific definitions for diamond
A form of pure carbon that occurs naturally as a clear, cubic crystal and is the hardest of all known minerals. It often occurs as octahedrons with rounded edges and curved surfaces. Diamond forms under conditions of extreme temperature and pressure and is most commonly found in volcanic breccias and in alluvial deposits. Poorly formed diamonds are used in abrasives and in industrial cutting tools.
The American Heritage® Science Dictionary
Copyright © 2011. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
Meaning diamond
What does diamond mean? Here you find 31 meanings of the word diamond. You can also add a definition of diamond yourself
1 |
0 A crystalline form of carbon, made of a network of covalent, tetrahedrally bound carbon atoms.
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2 |
0 diamondearly 14c., from Old French diamant, from Medieval Latin diamantem (nominative diamas), from Vulgar Latin *adiamantem (altered by influence of the many Greek words in dia-), from Latin adamantem (nomi [..]
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0 diamondDiamond [N] [S] A precious gem (Heb. yahalom’, in allusion to its hardness), otherwise unknown, the sixth, i.e., the third in the second row, in the breastplate of the high priest, with the name [..]
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0 diamondtype of crystal that is pure carbon and the hardest known natural substance.
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0 diamonda transparent piece of diamond that has been cut and polished and is valued as a precious gem very hard native crystalline carbon valued as a gem rhombus: a parallelogram with four equal sides; an obl [..]
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0 diamonda very hard colourless precious stone which sparkles
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0 diamondA legendary old salt who served in two wars as an infantry Marine. In the interwar years, ‘Lou’ Diamond
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0 diamond(1.) A precious gem (Heb. yahalom’, in allusion to its hardness), otherwise unknown, the sixth, i.e., the third in the second row, in the breastplate of the high priest, with the name of Naphtali [..]
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0 diamond(Heb. yahalom), a gem crystallized carbon, the most valued and brilliant of precious stones, remarkable for its hardness, the third precious stone in the second row on the breastplate of the high prie [..]
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0 diamondIn bookbinding, an ornament in the shape of a rhombus, usually built up of small massed tools done in blind, ink, or gold. A lozenge is a rhombus-shaped decorative design with one axis longer than the [..]
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11 |
0 diamonddiment
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0 diamondbrilyant
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0 diamondNoun. Wonderful, excellent. [Orig. London]
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0 diamondThe inner part of a crossing where the rails form a diamond shape.
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0 diamond(n) a transparent piece of diamond that has been cut and polished and is valued as a precious gem(n) very hard native crystalline carbon valued as a gem(n) a parallelogram with four equal sides; an [..]
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0 diamondOne winters morning, while attending early service in Trinity College, Newton inadvertently left Diamond shut up in his room. On returning from chapel he found that the little fellow had ups [..]
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0 diamondTaking corners by driving into them fairly straight and then making a sharp turn in the middle of the corner. The car will then drive out of the corner fairly straight. This will give a diamond-shaped trajectory around the track.
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18 |
0 diamondDiamond. A crystalline form of Carbon that occurs as hard, colorless or tinted isomeric crystals. It is used as a precious stone, for cutting Glass, and as bearings for delicate mechanisms. (From Gran [..]
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19 |
0 diamondDiamond. A crystalline form of carbon that occurs as hard, colorless or tinted isomeric crystals. It is used as a precious stone, for cutting glass, and as bearings for delicate mechanisms. (From Gran [..]
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20 |
0 diamondThe hardest known mineral, composed of pure carbon; low-quality diamonds are used to make bits for diamond drilling in rock. Diamond drill
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0 diamondThe hardest and most brilliant of all precious gems. Drills are equipped with diamond tips in order to cut through hard rock.
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0 diamondDiamond is the only gemstone composed of a single element – carbon. It is also the hardest natural gem, holding the position of 10 on the Mohs scale. Diamond takes a fine polish, which makes its surfaces highly reflective. This type of luster is described as adamantine. Diamonds come in all colors of the rainbow. Those not represented on the norm [..]
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23 |
0 diamondPeter Diamond has made fundamental contributions to economic theory over a wide range of areas including search theory and its implications …
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0 diamondOne of the parade formations of four aircraft. Wingmen No.2 and 3 fly a parade wing on either side of the flight lead, while No.4 tucks just below and behind the lead’s tail. It’s especially [..]
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25 |
0 diamond(1) The suit second lowest in rank, next above the club suit, represented by the symbol ♦ . This represents the third estate, although the symbolism is not obvious. (2) The symbol. The suit originat [..]
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26 |
0 diamondthe name for the infield, marking out the four bases.
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27 |
0 diamondA shape where 4 stones of the same color are next to the same empty space.
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28 |
0 diamondthe area on the softball infield between the bases on each corner
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29 |
0 diamond(uncountable) A glimmering glass-like mineral that is an allotrope of carbon in which each atom is surrounded by four others in the form of a tetrahedron. »The saw is coated with diamond.» A g [..]
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30 |
0 diamondof modern usage, from the name of the gem. en|Schwachman-Diamond syndrome
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31 |
0 diamondFrom the English word diamond for the clear colourless precious stone, the traditional birthstone of April. It is derived from Late Latin diamas, from Latin adamas, which is of Greek origin meaning &a [..]
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English[edit]
Pronunciation[edit]
- IPA(key): /ˈdaɪ.(ə.)mənd/
Etymology 1[edit]
From Middle English dyamaunt, from Old French diamant, from Late Latin diamas, from Latin adamas, from Ancient Greek ἀδάμας (adámas, “diamond”).
Noun[edit]
diamond (countable and uncountable, plural diamonds)
- (uncountable) A glimmering glass-like mineral that is an allotrope of carbon in which each atom is surrounded by four others in the form of a tetrahedron.
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The saw is coated with diamond.
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- A gemstone made from this mineral.
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The dozen loose diamonds sparkled in the light.
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2012 March 1, Lee A. Groat, “Gemstones”, in American Scientist[1], volume 100, number 2, page 128:
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Although there are dozens of different types of gems, among the best known and most important are diamond, ruby and sapphire, emerald and other gem forms of the mineral beryl, chrysoberyl, tanzanite, tsavorite, topaz and jade.
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- A ring containing a diamond.
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What a beautiful engagement diamond.
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- A very pale blue color.
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diamond:
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- Something that resembles a diamond.
- (geometry) A rhombus, especially when oriented so that its longer axis is vertical.
- (geometry) The polyiamond made up of two triangles.
- (baseball) The entire field of play used in the game.
- (baseball) The infield of a baseball field.
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The teams met on the diamond.
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- (card games) A card of the diamonds suit.
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I have only one diamond in my hand.
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- (printing, uncountable, dated) A size of type, standardised as 41⁄2 point.
Synonyms[edit]
- (gemstone): sparkler (informal)
- (ring): diamond ring
- (something that resembles a diamond): adamant
- (geometry: rhombus): lozenge, rhomb, rhombus
- (geometry: polyiamond): 2-iamond
- (baseball: entire baseball field): ball field, baseball field
- (baseball: infield of a baseball field): baseball diamond, infield
Antonyms[edit]
- (baseball: infield of a baseball field): outfield
Derived terms[edit]
- accent diamond
- adamantine
- American diamond
- baseball diamond
- black diamond
- blood diamond
- Bristol diamond
- chocolate diamond
- deadly diamond of death
- diamond accent
- diamond anniversary
- diamond anvil cell
- diamond beetle (Chrysolopus spectabilis)
- diamond bird (Pardalotus punctatus)
- diamond bracket
- diamond carry
- diamond cross
- diamond crossing
- diamond crossover
- diamond cut diamond
- diamond cutter
- diamond dove (Geopelia cuneata)
- diamond duck
- diamond dust
- diamond firetail (Stagonopleura guttata)
- diamond frame
- diamond geezer
- diamond grass (Calamagrostis brachyathera)
- diamond hands
- diamond in the rough
- diamond jubilee
- diamond junction
- diamond lane
- diamond marimba
- diamond mortar
- diamond mullet (Planiliza alata)
- diamond number
- diamond paste
- diamond planet
- diamond plate
- diamond poem
- diamond problem
- diamond python (Morelia spilota spilota)
- diamond ring effect
- diamond saw
- diamond turbot (Hypsopsetta guttulata)
- diamond twill
- Diamond Valley
- diamond wedding
- diamond wheel
- diamond willow (Salix spp.)
- diamond-shaped
- diamond-square algorithm
- diamond-water paradox
- diamondback
- diamondback moth (Plutella xylostella)
- diamondiferous
- diamonds are a girl’s best friend
- diamonds are forever
- dreaded diamond
- fire diamond
- hyperdiamond
- industrial diamond
- Killiecrankie diamond
- Mach diamond
- nanodiamond
- pink diamond
- poor man’s diamond
- pressure makes diamonds
- rose diamond
- rough diamond
- shock diamond
- table diamond, table-diamond
- thrust diamond
- tidal diamond
[edit]
- demantoid
- diamantine
Translations[edit]
uncountable: mineral
- Abaza: алмаз (almaz)
- Abkhaz: алмас (almas)
- Afrikaans: diamant (af)
- Albanian: diamant (sq) m, padamar m, adham m
- Amharic: አልማዝ (ʾälmaz)
- Arabic: أَلْمَاس m (ʔalmās), مَاس m (mās)
- Egyptian Arabic: الماظ m pl (almaẓ), الماس m pl (almas)
- Aramaic:
- Syriac: ܐܵܠܡܵܣ, ܐܵܕܵܡܘܿܣ, ܡܵܫܘܿܫܵܐ
- Armenian: ադամանդ (hy) (adamand), ալմաստ (hy) (almast)
- Assamese: হীৰা (hira)
- Asturian: diamante m
- Avar: алмас (almas)
- Azerbaijani: almaz (az)
- Bambara: lúulu, jaman
- Bashkir: алмас (almas) (uncut), гәүһәр (gäwhär), бриллиант (brilliant) (cut)
- Belarusian: алма́з m (almáz), дыяме́нт m (dyjamjént)
- Bengali: হীরা (bn) (hira)
- Bulgarian: диама́нт (bg) m (diamánt), елма́з (bg) m (elmáz)
- Burmese: စိန် (my) (cin)
- Catalan: diamant (ca) m
- Central Melanau: itan
- Cherokee: ᏅᏯ ᎤᏥᏍᏓᎷᎩᏍᎩ (nvya utsisdalugisgi)
- Chinese:
- Cantonese: 金剛石/金刚石 (gam1 gong1 sek6)
- Hakka: 金剛石/金刚石 (kîm-kong-sa̍k)
- Mandarin: 金剛石/金刚石 (zh) (jīngāngshí)
- Min Nan: 金剛石/金刚石 (kim-kong-chio̍h)
- Classical Nahuatl: tlacuāhuac tecpatl
- Cornish: adamant m
- Crimean Tatar: elmaz
- Czech: diamant (cs) m
- Danish: diamant (da) c
- Dutch: diamant (nl) n
- Esperanto: diamanto
- Estonian: teemant
- Faroese: diamantur m
- Finnish: timantti (fi)
- French: diamant (fr) m
- Friulian: diamant m
- Gagauz: almaz
- Galician: diamante (gl) m
- Georgian: ალმასი (almasi)
- German: Diamant (de) m
- Greek: διαμάντι (el) n (diamánti)
- Ancient: ἀδάμας m (adámas)
- Gujarati: હીરો (gu) m (hīro)
- Hausa: daimon (ha) m
- Hawaiian: kaimana
- Hebrew: יַהֲלוֹם (he) (yahalóm)
- Hiligaynon: batongmaidlak
- Hindi: हीरा (hi) m (hīrā), अलमास (hi) m (almās), वज्र (hi) m (vajra), डायमंड (hi) m (ḍāymaṇḍ)
- Hungarian: gyémánt (hu)
- Iban: intan
- Icelandic: demantur (is) n
- Indonesian: intan (id)
- Irish: diamant m, diamaint m pl
- Istriot: giamanto m
- Italian: diamante (it) m
- Japanese: 金剛石 (ja) (こんごうせき, kongōseki), ダイヤモンド (ja) (daiyamondo), ダイヤ (ja) (daiya)
- Kannada: ವಜ್ರ (kn) (vajra)
- Kashubian: diamańt m
- Kazakh: алмаз (almaz)
- Khmer: ពេជ្រ (km) (pɨc)
- Korean: 다이아몬드 (ko) (daiamondeu)
- Kurdish:
- Northern Kurdish: elmas (ku)
- Kyrgyz: алмаз (ky) (almaz)
- Ladino: diyamante m
- Lak: алмас (almas)
- Lao: ເພັດ (lo) (phet)
- Latin: adamas m
- Latvian: dimants m
- Lezgi: алмас (almas)
- Lithuanian: deimantas m
- Luxembourgish: Diamant m
- Macedonian: дијама́нт m (dijamánt)
- Malagasy: diamondra (mg)
- Malay: intan (ms), almas
- Malayalam: വജ്രം (ml) (vajraṃ)
- Maori: taimana
- Maranao: intan
- Marathi: हिरा m (hirā)
- Middle Persian: [script needed] (ʾlmʾs /almās/)
- Mongolian:
- Cyrillic: алмааз (almaaz), алмаз (almaz), алмас (mn) (almas), алмаас (mn) (almaas)
- Mongolian: ᠠᠯᠮᠠᠰ (almas)
- Nepali: हिरा (hirā)
- Newar: हेरा (herā)
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: diamant (no) m
- Nynorsk: diamant m
- Occitan: diamant (oc) m
- Oriya: ଡାଏମନ୍ (or) (ḍaemôn)
- Papiamentu: djamanta
- Pashto: الماس (ps) m (almãs)
- Persian: الماس (fa) (almâs)
- Polish: diament (pl) m
- Portuguese: diamante (pt) m
- Punjabi: ਹੀਰਾ m (hīrā)
- Romagnol: diamânt m, giamânt m
- Romanian: diamant (ro) n
- Romansch: diamant m, diamànt m (Sutsilvan)
- Russian: алма́з (ru) m (almáz), диама́нт (ru) m (diamánt) (archaic), адама́нт (ru) m (adamánt) (archaic)
- S’gaw Karen: တၢ်မျၢ်ပလဲ (ta̱ mla̱ pa leh)
- Sanskrit: वज्रम् (sa) m (vajram), अविक (sa) n (avika), वज्र (sa) m (vajra)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: дијамант m
- Roman: dijamant (sh) m
- Sinhalese: දියමන්ති (si) (diyamanti)
- Slovak: diamant (sk) m
- Slovene: diamánt (sl) m, démant m
- Sorbian:
- Lower Sorbian: dejmant m
- Spanish: diamante (es) m
- Sranan Tongo: dyamanti
- Swahili: almasi (sw) class 9/10
- Swedish: diamant (sv) c
- Tabasaran: алмас (almas)
- Tagalog: diyamante
- Tajik: алмос (almos)
- Tamil: வைரம் (ta) (vairam)
- Tarantino: diamande
- Tatar: алмаз (almaz)
- Telugu: వజ్రం (te) (vajraṁ), వజ్రము (te) (vajramu)
- Thai: เพชร (th) (pét)
- Tibetan: རྡོ་རྗེ (rdo rje)
- Tigrinya: ኣልማዝ (ʾalmaz)
- Tok Pisin: daimen
- Turkish: elmas (tr)
- Turkmen: almaz (tk)
- Ukrainian: алма́з (uk) m (almáz), діама́нт m (diamánt)
- Urdu: ہیرا m (hīrā), الماس m (almās)
- Uyghur: ئالماس (almas)
- Uzbek: olmos (uz)
- Venetian: diamante (vec) m
- Vietnamese: kim cương (vi)
- Vilamovian: djēmyt m
- Welsh: diemwnt m
- West Frisian: diamant c
- Xhosa: idayimani
- Yiddish: דימענט m (diment)
- Zulu: idayimane class 5/6
gemstone
- Albanian: adham m, diamant (sq) m, brilant (sq) m,
- Arbëresh: padamar
- Arabic: مَاس m (mās), أَلْمَاسَة f (ʔalmāsa) (singulative), أَلْمَاس m (ʔalmās) (collective), مَاسَة f (māsa) (singulative)
- Armenian: ադամանդ (hy) (adamand), ալմաստ (hy) (almast)
- Azerbaijani: brilyant (az)
- Bashkir: алмас (almas)
- Belarusian: брылья́нт m (brylʹjánt), дыяме́нт m (dyjamjént)
- Bengali: হীরা (bn) (hira)
- Bulgarian: диама́нт (bg) m (diamánt), бриля́нт (bg) m (briljánt)
- Burmese: စိန် (my) (cin)
- Catalan: diamant (ca) m
- Chinese:
- Cantonese: 鑽石/钻石 (zyun3 sek6)
- Mandarin: 鑽石/钻石 (zh) (zuànshí)
- Minnan: 璇石 (soān-chio̍h)
- Classical Nahuatl: tlacuāhuac tecpatl
- Cornish: adamant
- Czech: diamant (cs) m
- Danish: diamant (da) c
- Dutch: diamant (nl) m
- Esperanto: diamanto
- Estonian: teemant
- Faroese: diamantur m
- Fijian: daimani
- Finnish: timantti (fi)
- French: diamant (fr) m
- Galician: diamante (gl) m
- Georgian: ბრილიანტი (brilianṭi), ანდამატი (andamaṭi)
- German: Diamant (de) m, Brillant (de) m
- Greek: διαμάντι (el) n (diamánti)
- Ancient: ἀδάμας m (adámas)
- Hebrew: יַהֲלוֹם (he) m (yahalom)
- Hindi: हीरा (hi) m (hīrā), अलमास (hi) m (almās), वज्र (hi) m (vajra), डायमंड (hi) m (ḍāymaṇḍ)
- Hungarian: gyémánt (hu)
- Icelandic: demantur (is) m
- Indonesian: berlian (id)
- Irish: diamant m
- Italian: diamante (it) m
- Japanese: ダイヤモンド (ja) (daiyamondo), ダイヤ (ja) (daiya), 金剛石 (ja) (こんごうせき, kongōseki), ギヤマン (giyaman) (historical)
- Kazakh: алмаз (almaz)
- Khmer: ពេជ្រ (km) (pɨc)
- Korean: 다이아몬드 (ko) (daiamondeu)
- Kyrgyz: алмаз (ky) (almaz)
- Lao: ເພັດ (lo) (phet)
- Latin: adamas m
- Latvian: dimants m
- Lithuanian: deimantas m
- Macedonian: дијама́нт m (dijamánt)
- Malay: intan (ms), almas
- Maltese: djamant
- Manchu: ᡦᠠᠯᡨᠠ (palta)
- Mongolian:
- Cyrillic: алмааз (almaaz), алмаз (almaz), алмас (mn) (almas), алмаас (mn) (almaas)
- Mongolian: ᠠᠯᠮᠠᠰ (almas)
- Navajo: óola niłtólí, óola niłtólí ílínígíí, tsé diichiłí
- Norwegian: diamant (no)
- Persian: الماس (fa) (almâs)
- Polish: diament (pl) m
- Portuguese: diamante (pt) m
- Romanian: diamant (ro) n
- Romansch: diamant m
- Russian: алма́з (ru) m (almáz), бриллиа́нт (ru) m (brilliánt), брилья́нт (ru) m (brilʹjánt) (variant of «бриллиант»), брю́лик (ru) m (brjúlik) (slang), диама́нт (ru) (diamánt) (archaic)
- Samoan: taimane
- Sanskrit: वज्र (sa) m (vajra)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: дијамант m
- Roman: dijamant (sh) m
- Shan: ၸိင်ႇ (shn) (tsìng)
- Sicilian: diamanti m
- Sinhalese: දියමන්ති (si) (diyamanti)
- Slovak: diamant (sk) m
- Slovene: diamant (sl) m, demant m
- Spanish: diamante (es) m, gema (es)
- Swahili: almasi (sw)
- Swedish: brilliant (sv) c, diamant (sv) c
- Tagalog: brilyante, diyamante
- Tajik: алмос (almos)
- Telugu: వజ్రం (te) (vajraṁ)
- Thai: เพชร (th) (pét)
- Tok Pisin: daimen
- Turkish: pırlanta (tr)
- Turkmen: almaz (tk)
- Ukrainian: діама́нт m (diamánt), брилья́нт (uk) m (brylʹjánt)
- Urdu: ہیرا m (hīrā)
- Uyghur: ئالماس (almas)
- Uzbek: olmos (uz)
- Vietnamese: kim cương (vi)
- Welsh: diemwnt m, diemwntau m pl
- Yiddish: דימענט (diment)
very pale blue color/colour
geometry: polyiamond
- Bulgarian: ромб m (romb)
- Chinese:
- Cantonese: 菱形 (ling4 jing4)
- Mandarin: 菱形 (zh) (língxíng)
- Irish: muileata m
- Russian: ромб (ru) m (romb)
card games: card of the diamonds suit
- Arabic: اَلدِّينَارِيّ m (ad-dīnāriyy)
- Armenian: ագուռ (hy) (aguṙ)
- Asturian: diamante m
- Bulgarian: каро́ n (karó)
- Burmese: ချွန်း (my) (hkywan:)
- Chinese:
- Cantonese: 階磚/阶砖 (gaai1 zyun1)
- Mandarin: 方塊/方块 (zh) (fāngkuài)
- Czech: káry (cs) f pl, kule (cs) f pl
- Danish: ruder
- Estonian: ruutu (et)
- Finnish: ruutu (fi)
- French: carreau (fr) m
- German: Karo (de) n
- Greek: καρό (el) n (karó)
- Hebrew: יהלום (he) m (yahalom)
- Hungarian: káró (hu)
- Icelandic: tígull (is) m
- Irish: muileata m
- Italian: quadri (it) m pl
- Japanese: ダイヤ (ja) (daiya)
- Khmer: ការ៉ូ (kaaroo)
- Korean: 다이아몬드 (ko) (daiamondeu)
- Macedonian: каро́ n (karó), баклава f (baklava)
- Mongolian:
- Cyrillic: дөрвөлжин (mn) (dörvölžin)
- Mongolian: ᠳᠥᠷᠪᠡᠯᠵᠢᠨ (dörbelǰin)
- Navajo: óola
- Ojibwe: gaanoo, gakak
- Persian: خشت (fa) (xešt)
- Polish: karo (pl) n, poduszka (pl) f (colloquial), diament (pl) f (colloquial)
- Portuguese: ouros (pt) m pl
- Russian: бу́бны (ru) f pl (búbny), бу́бна (ru) f (búbna)
- Swahili: uru
- Swedish: ruter (sv) c, ruterkort n
- Thai: ข้าวหลามตัด (th) (kâao-lǎam-dtàt)
- Tok Pisin: daimen
- Welsh: diemwnt m, deimwnt m
See also[edit]
- argyle
- carbonado
- diamante
- paragon
- chlenter
- rhinestone
- brifka
Adjective[edit]
diamond (not comparable)
- made of, or containing diamond, a diamond or diamonds.
- Synonym: diamantine
-
He gave her diamond earrings.
- of, relating to, or being a sixtieth anniversary.
-
Today is their diamond wedding anniversary.
-
- of, relating to, or being a seventy-fifth anniversary.
-
Today is their diamond wedding anniversary.
-
- (slang) First-rate; excellent.
-
He’s a diamond geezer.
-
Translations[edit]
Verb[edit]
diamond (third-person singular simple present diamonds, present participle diamonding, simple past and past participle diamonded)
- to adorn with or as if with diamonds
Translations[edit]
Etymology 2[edit]
Borrowed from Dutch diamant, used by Dirck Voskens who first cut it around 1700, presumably naming it by analogy with the larger Perl.
Noun[edit]
diamond (uncountable)
- (printing, dated) The size of type between brilliant and pearl, standardized as 41⁄2-point.
Further reading[edit]
- David Barthelmy (1997–2023), “Diamond”, in Webmineral Mineralogy Database.
- “diamond”, in Mindat.org[2], Hudson Institute of Mineralogy, 2000–2023.
di·a·mond
(dī′ə-mənd, dī′mənd)
n.
1. An extremely hard, highly refractive crystalline form of carbon that is usually colorless and is used as a gemstone and in abrasives, cutting tools, and other applications.
2. A piece of jewelry containing such a gemstone.
3. A rhombus, particularly when oriented so that one diagonal extends from left to right and the other diagonal extends from top to bottom.
4. Games
a. A red, lozenge-shaped figure on certain playing cards.
b. A playing card with this figure.
c. diamonds(used with a sing. or pl. verb) The suit of cards represented by this figure.
5. Baseball
a. The infield.
b. The whole playing field.
adj.
Of or relating to a 60th or 75th anniversary.
tr.v. di·a·mond·ed, di·a·mond·ing, di·a·monds
To adorn with diamonds.
Idiom:
diamond in the rough
One having exceptionally good qualities or the potential for greatness but lacking polish and refinement.
[Middle English diamaunt, from Old French diamant, from Medieval Latin diamās, diamant-, alteration of Latin adamās; see adamant.]
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
diamond
(ˈdaɪəmənd)
n
1. (Minerals)
a. a colourless exceptionally hard mineral (but often tinted yellow, orange, blue, brown, or black by impurities), found in certain igneous rocks (esp the kimberlites of South Africa). It is used as a gemstone, as an abrasive, and on the working edges of cutting tools. Composition: carbon. Formula: C. Crystal structure: cubic
b. (as modifier): a diamond ring. diamantine
2. (Jewellery)
a. a colourless exceptionally hard mineral (but often tinted yellow, orange, blue, brown, or black by impurities), found in certain igneous rocks (esp the kimberlites of South Africa). It is used as a gemstone, as an abrasive, and on the working edges of cutting tools. Composition: carbon. Formula: C. Crystal structure: cubic
b. (as modifier): a diamond ring. diamantine
3. (Mathematics) geometry
a. a figure having four sides of equal length forming two acute angles and two obtuse angles; rhombus
b. (modifier) rhombic
4. (Card Games)
a. a red lozenge-shaped symbol on a playing card
b. a card with one or more of these symbols or (when plural) the suit of cards so marked
5. (Baseball) baseball
a. the whole playing field
b. the square formed by the four bases
6. (Printing, Lithography & Bookbinding) (formerly) a size of printer’s type approximately equal to 4 point
7. (Minerals) black diamond a figurative name for coal
8. (Minerals) an unpolished diamond
9. a person of fine character who lacks refinement and polish
vb
(Jewellery) (tr) to decorate with or as with diamonds
[C13: from Old French diamant, from Medieval Latin diamas, modification of Latin adamas the hardest iron or steel, diamond; see adamant]
ˈdiamond-ˌlike adj
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
dia•mond
(ˈdaɪ mənd, ˈdaɪ ə-)
n.
1. a pure or nearly pure, extremely hard form of carbon crystallized in the isometric system.
2. a piece of this substance.
3. a transparent, flawless or almost flawless piece of this mineral, esp. when cut and polished, valued as a precious gem.
4. a piece of jewelry containing a diamond.
5. a piece of this mineral used in a drill or cutting tool.
6. an equilateral quadrilateral, esp. as placed with its diagonals vertical and horizontal.
7. a red rhombus-shaped figure on a playing card.
8. a card bearing such figures.
9. diamonds, (used with a sing. or pl. v.) the suit so marked.
10.
a. the infield in baseball.
b. the entire playing field.
adj.
11. made of or set with diamonds.
12. having the shape of a diamond.
13. indicating the 60th or 75th event of a series, as a wedding anniversary.
v.t.
14. to adorn with or as if with diamonds.
Idioms:
diamond in the rough, a person or thing of inherent but uncultivated worth.
[1275–1325; < Old French]
Dia•mond
(ˈdaɪ mənd, ˈdaɪ ə-)
n.
Random House Kernerman Webster’s College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.
di·a·mond
(dī′ə-mənd)
A form of pure carbon that occurs naturally as a clear crystal and is the hardest of all known minerals. It is used as a gemstone in its finer varieties. Poorly crystallized diamonds are used in abrasives and in industrial cutting tools. See Note at carbon.
The American Heritage® Student Science Dictionary, Second Edition. Copyright © 2014 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
diamond
— Developed from adamant—the name of the hardest stone or mineral of ancient times—from Latin adamans, from Greek adamas, «invincible» (a-, «not,» and daman, «to tame»).
See also related terms for mineral.
Farlex Trivia Dictionary. © 2012 Farlex, Inc. All rights reserved.
diamond
Past participle: diamonded
Gerund: diamonding
Imperative |
---|
diamond |
diamond |
Present |
---|
I diamond |
you diamond |
he/she/it diamonds |
we diamond |
you diamond |
they diamond |
Preterite |
---|
I diamonded |
you diamonded |
he/she/it diamonded |
we diamonded |
you diamonded |
they diamonded |
Present Continuous |
---|
I am diamonding |
you are diamonding |
he/she/it is diamonding |
we are diamonding |
you are diamonding |
they are diamonding |
Present Perfect |
---|
I have diamonded |
you have diamonded |
he/she/it has diamonded |
we have diamonded |
you have diamonded |
they have diamonded |
Past Continuous |
---|
I was diamonding |
you were diamonding |
he/she/it was diamonding |
we were diamonding |
you were diamonding |
they were diamonding |
Past Perfect |
---|
I had diamonded |
you had diamonded |
he/she/it had diamonded |
we had diamonded |
you had diamonded |
they had diamonded |
Future |
---|
I will diamond |
you will diamond |
he/she/it will diamond |
we will diamond |
you will diamond |
they will diamond |
Future Perfect |
---|
I will have diamonded |
you will have diamonded |
he/she/it will have diamonded |
we will have diamonded |
you will have diamonded |
they will have diamonded |
Future Continuous |
---|
I will be diamonding |
you will be diamonding |
he/she/it will be diamonding |
we will be diamonding |
you will be diamonding |
they will be diamonding |
Present Perfect Continuous |
---|
I have been diamonding |
you have been diamonding |
he/she/it has been diamonding |
we have been diamonding |
you have been diamonding |
they have been diamonding |
Future Perfect Continuous |
---|
I will have been diamonding |
you will have been diamonding |
he/she/it will have been diamonding |
we will have been diamonding |
you will have been diamonding |
they will have been diamonding |
Past Perfect Continuous |
---|
I had been diamonding |
you had been diamonding |
he/she/it had been diamonding |
we had been diamonding |
you had been diamonding |
they had been diamonding |
Conditional |
---|
I would diamond |
you would diamond |
he/she/it would diamond |
we would diamond |
you would diamond |
they would diamond |
Past Conditional |
---|
I would have diamonded |
you would have diamonded |
he/she/it would have diamonded |
we would have diamonded |
you would have diamonded |
they would have diamonded |
Collins English Verb Tables © HarperCollins Publishers 2011
diamond
Nickname for the infield.
Dictionary of Unfamiliar Words by Diagram Group Copyright © 2008 by Diagram Visual Information Limited
Translations
ديناريرَأْس إبْرَة جِهاز التَّسْجيلشَكل الماسَهماسماس، ألماس
diamantkosočtverecdiamantovýkáro
diamantruderrhombe
teemant
timanttivinoneliöruutu
dijamant
gyémántkárótök
demanturtígulltígullaga formdemantsnál
ダイヤモンドひし形
금강석다이아몬드
būgnaibūgnasdeimantasdeimantinė galvutėrombas
briljanta-briljantsdimanta-dimanta galviņadimants
diamantdiamantovýkáro
diamantkaro
diamantrombruterbrilliant
เพชรสี่เหลี่ยมขนมเปียกปูน
hình thoikim cương
Collins Spanish Dictionary — Complete and Unabridged 8th Edition 2005 © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1971, 1988 © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2005
diamond
[ˈdaɪəmənd]
modif [bracelet, brooch, earrings] → en diamant
diamond ring → bague f en diamant(s)diamond jubilee n → (célébration f du) soixantième anniversaire m (d’un événement important)diamond wedding n → noces fpl de diamant
Collins English/French Electronic Resource. © HarperCollins Publishers 2005
diamond
n
diamonds pl (Cards) → Karo nt; the ace/seven of diamonds → das Karoass/die Karosieben
(Baseball) → Innenfeld nt
(Math: = rhombus) → Raute f
diamond
in cpds → Diamant-; diamond bracelet → Diamantarmband nt;
diamond cutter
n → Diamantschneider(in) m(f); (Ind) → Diamantschleifer(in) m(f)
diamond cutting
n → Diamantschleifen nt
diamond lane
n (US) mit Raute gekennzeichnete Fahrspur, auf der nur Busse, Taxis und Privatautos mit mehr als einem Insassen fahren dürfen
Collins German Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged 7th Edition 2005. © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1980 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1997, 1999, 2004, 2005, 2007
Collins Italian Dictionary 1st Edition © HarperCollins Publishers 1995
diamond
(ˈdaiəmənd) noun
1. a very hard, colourless precious stone. Her brooch had three diamonds in it; (also adjective) a diamond ring.
2. a piece of diamond (often artificial) used as a tip on eg a record-player stylus.
3. a kind of four-sided figure or shape; ♢. There was a pattern of red and yellow diamonds on the floor.
4. one of the playing-cards of the suit diamonds, which have red symbols of this shape on them.
ˈdiamonds noun plural
(sometimes treated as noun singular) one of the four card suits. the five of diamonds.
Kernerman English Multilingual Dictionary © 2006-2013 K Dictionaries Ltd.
diamond
→ ماس, مُعَيـَّن diamant, kosočtverec diamant, ruder Diamant, Raute διαμάντι diamante, rombo timantti, vinoneliö diamant, losange dijamant diamante, rombo ダイヤモンド, ひし形 금강석, 다이아몬드 diamant diamant diament, romb diamante алмаз, ромб diamant, romb เพชร, สี่เหลี่ยมขนมเปียกปูน elmas hình thoi, kim cương 菱形, 钻石
Multilingual Translator © HarperCollins Publishers 2009
- diamond
- [‘daɪəmənd]
1. сущ.1) алмаз; бриллиант
flawless / perfect diamond — чистый бриллиант
industrial diamond — промышленный алмаз
cut diamond — ограненный бриллиант
rough / uncut diamond — неотшлифованный алмаз
to cut / grind / polish a diamond — шлифовать, гранить бриллиант
to set a diamond — оправлять бриллиант
diamond of first water — бриллиант чистой воды
The grass is covered with minute diamonds of white frost. — Трава покрыта мельчайшими, сверкающими как алмазы, частичками инея.
2) алмаз
glazier’s diamond, cutting diamond — алмаз для резки стекла
Syn:
4) карт. бубны
5)
амер.
площадка для игры в бейсбол
••
diamond cut diamond — один другому не уступит, они достойные противники
2. прил.
1) алмазный, сделанный из алмаза
diamond fields — алмазные копи
diamond dust / powder тех. — алмазный порошок
2) бриллиантовый
diamond ring — бриллиантовое кольцо
3) ромбовидный, ромбоидальный
Syn:
••
Diamond State амер. — «Бриллиантовый штат»
diamond wedding — бриллиантовая свадьба
3. гл.
украшать бриллиантами
The tears rolled over the long lashes, and diamonded her cheek. (A. James) — Слёзы катились по длинным ресницам и блестели у неё на щеках как бриллианты.
Англо-русский современный словарь.
2014.
Полезное
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Diamond — Di a*mond (?; 277), n. [OE. diamaund, diamaunt, F. diamant, corrupted, fr. L. adamas, the hardest iron, steel, diamond, Gr. ?. Perh. the corruption is due to the influence of Gr. ? transparent. See {Adamant}, {Tame}.] 1. A precious stone or gem… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
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Diamond DA-42 — Diamond DA42 Diamond DA42 … Wikipédia en Français
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Diamond’s — was a department store based in Phoenix, Arizona. Originally named The Boston Store, it was founded in 1897 by Nathan and Issac Diamond, Jewish immigrants who had earlier begun a dry goods mercantile in El Paso. Consisting of one store in… … Wikipedia
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Diamond — Diamond, IL U.S. village in Illinois Population (2000): 1393 Housing Units (2000): 597 Land area (2000): 1.582375 sq. miles (4.098332 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km) Total area (2000): 1.582375 sq. miles (4.098332… … StarDict’s U.S. Gazetteer Places
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diamond — [dī′mənd, dī′ə mənd] n. [ME diamaunt < OFr diamant < ML diamas (gen. diamantis), for L adamas < Gr, ADAMANT, diamond] 1. a usually colorless, crystalline mineral consisting of pure carbon, with nearly perfect cleavage and the greatest… … English World dictionary
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DIAMOND, I.A.L. — DIAMOND, I.A.L. (Itek Domnici; 1920–1988), U.S. film scriptwriter. Born in Ungheni, Romania, Diamond was taken to New York, where his father changed the family name. A mathematics prodigy in high school, he studied engineering at Columbia… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
Meaning of DIAMOND in English
[di.a.mond] n, often attrib [ME diamaunde, fr. MF diamant, fr. OF, fr. LL diamant-, diamas, alter. of L adamant-, adamas hardest metal, diamond, fr. Gk] (14c) 1 a: native crystalline carbon that is usu. nearly colorless, that when transparent and free from flaws is highly valued as a precious stone, and that is used industrially as an abrasive powder and in rock drills because of its great hardness; also: a piece of this substance b: crystallized carbon produced artificially
2: something that resembles a diamond (as in brilliance, value, or fine quality)
3: a square or rhombus-shaped figure usu. oriented with the long diagonal vertical
4. a: a playing card marked with a stylized figure of a red diamond b pl but sing or pl in constr: the suit comprising cards marked with diamonds
5: a baseball infield; also: the entire playing field
[2]diamond vt (1751): to adorn with or as if with diamonds [3]diamond adj (1872): of, relating to, or being a 60th or 75th anniversary or its celebration «~ jubilee»
Merriam-Webster English vocab.
Английский словарь Merriam Webster.
2012
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WordReference Random House Learner’s Dictionary of American English © 2023 dia•mond /ˈdaɪmənd, ˈdaɪə-/USA pronunciation
adj. [before a noun]
Idioms
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2023 dia•mond
adj.
v.t.
dia′mond•like′, adj.
Dia•mond
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers:: diamond /ˈdaɪəmənd/ n
vb
Etymology: 13th Century: from Old French diamant, from Medieval Latin diamas, modification of Latin adamas the hardest iron or steel, diamond; see adamant ‘diamond‘ also found in these entries (note: many are not synonyms or translations): |
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I
1. {ʹdaıəmənd} n
1. алмаз; бриллиант
black ~ — чёрный алмаз; карбонадо
black ~s — образн. каменный уголь
rough /uncut/ ~, ~ in the rough — неотшлифованный алмаз (тж. перен. о человеке)
~ of the first water — бриллиант чистой воды
cut ~ — отшлифованный алмаз, бриллиант
~ merchant — торговец бриллиантами
2. 1) алмаз (инструмент для резки стекла; тж. cutting ~)
2) алмаз для правки шлифовальных кругов
3. мат. ромб
4. амер. площадка для игры в бейсбол; бейсбольное поле
5. геральд. чёрный цвет
6. полигр. диамант (шрифт)
♢ ~ cut ~ — один другому не уступит (в хитрости, ловкости и т. п.); они достойные противники (в споре, полемике); ≅ нашла коса на камень
2. {ʹdaıəmənd} a
1. 1) алмазный; бриллиантовый
~ brooch — бриллиантовая брошь
~ necklace — бриллиантовое ожерелье
~ ring — кольцо с бриллиантом {см. тж. ~ ring}
2) алмазный, сделанный из алмаза
~ tool — тех. алмазный инструмент
2. алмазоносный; алмазосодержащий
~ bed — алмазная россыпь
~ mine /field/ — алмазная копь
~ pipes — геол. алмазоносные трубки
3. гранёный, ромбоидальный, ромбовидный
~ fret — ромбоидальный орнамент
~ netting — сеть с ромбовидными ячейками
~ crossing — ромбовидный перекрёсток
♢ ~ anniversary /jubilee/ — шестидесятилетний /амер. семидесятипятилетний/ юбилей
~ wedding — шестидесятая /амер. семьдесят пятая/ годовщина свадьбы, бриллиантовая свадьба
Diamond State — амер. «Алмазный штат» (шутливое название штата Делавэр)
3. {ʹdaıəmənd} v редк.
украшать бриллиантами
II {ʹdaıəmənd} n карт.
1) pl бубны, бубновая масть
knave of ~s — бубновый валет
2) бубна, бубновка, карта бубновой масти
small ~ — маленькая /плохая/ карта (бубновой масти)
to play a ~ — ходить {начинать} с бубён