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Definition of garnet in English: garnetnoun ˈɡɑːnɪtˈɡɑrnət 1A precious stone consisting of a deep red vitreous silicate mineral. 石榴子石 as modifier a garnet ring Example sentencesExamples - On the crescents were rubies and garnets in diamond form and in round forms.
- Again, it is assumed that readers know aquamarine is beryl, amethyst is quartz, and Iceland spar is calcite but cannot grapple with the complexity of remembering that spessartine and grossular are garnets.
- Rare earth element distributions in the zircons and garnets strongly suggest that the zircon overgrowths formed in equilibrium with garnet.
- Another garnet, a mixture of pyrope and spessartine, is called malaya garnet in the gem trade.
- One of the rings on her left hand was set with red garnets and the ring on her right middle finger is unusual as it is cut in an S shape.
- Another coiffure ornament from the 1904 display, now vanished but shown in the center of Plate V, consisted of silver filigree, carnelians, garnets, and enamel blackberries and leaves.
- The spring 2005 collection features thin fourteen-karat-gold strands interlaced with small garnets, emeralds, pink tourmalines, and other stones.
- In my next installment of News from Japan, I will be reporting on them as well as on a visit to Kyushu University to see the Ko collection and field trips to collect sakura ishi and rainbow garnets.
- A fellow that he knows showed us a bucketful of aquamarines and two large garnets and then took us for a short walk to the pegmatites on his farm.
- Those little red garnets you see in stores are usually pyrope garnets and green garnets are usually grossularite/grossular.
- Sapphires, rubies, garnets, and emeralds are all perfectly acceptable, though.
- In contrast, garnets from Salida, Colorado, are only superficially altered.
- Think of semi-precious stones such as garnets, topaz, amethyst, aquamarine as much for their range of hues as for the way they hold the light, infusing it with shimmering color.
- The rocks here are composed of mica schist, and garnets are often found embedded in them.
- She described star garnets from Emerald Creek, Idaho, as opaque.
- Emeralds, rubies, diamonds, blue sapphire, pearls, yellow sapphire, cat's eye, garnets, amethyst, jade, etc., are just some of the stones which are said to have healing properties.
- There are strings of garnets, opal, turquoise and onyx set in silver at the Jaipur stalls, lac bangles from Rajasthan, silver dipped in gold and even wooden Etikoppakka bangles coloured with vegetable dyes.
- He also found particles of gemstones such as corundum, garnet, rutile, and argentite.
- Generally, there was a higher demand for yellow and pink tourmaline, as well as medium to deep blue aquamarine followed by amethyst and pinkish garnets.
- He said if exploited in the right way Zambia's great variety of gemstones that includes emeralds, amethyst, aquamarines, tourmalines and garnets offered great potential for poverty reduction.
- 1.1Mineralogy mass noun Any of a class of silicate minerals including this, which belong to the cubic system and have the general chemical formula A₃B₂(SiO₄)₃ (A and B being respectively divalent and trivalent metals).
〔矿〕含石榴石的硅酸盐矿物 Example sentencesExamples - At the B-Q claims, beryl occurs with dark red garnet, smoky quartz, and black tourmaline in miarolitic cavities in a granite pegmatite dykes that cuts across the foliation of a high-grade metamorphic gneiss.
- Coexisting MI phases in these rocks include garnet, plagioclase, quartz, tourmaline and fluorite.
- Most have some collectible minerals such as beryl, garnet, and schorl, and a few have lithium minerals.
- Early attempts applying the Sm-Nd isotope system to garnet and clinopyroxene were encouraging and often yielded dates considered as representing near-peak P-T conditions.
- That the Fe-Mg equilibrium between garnet and clinopyroxene records high temperatures, indicates that early elemental compositions were preserved through the lower temperature part of the P-T-t path.
OriginMiddle English: probably via Middle Dutch from Old French grenat, from medieval Latin granatus, perhaps from granatum (see pomegranate), because the garnet is similar in colour to the pulp of the fruit. Definition of garnet in US English: garnetnounˈɡärnətˈɡɑrnət 1A precious stone consisting of a deep red vitreous silicate mineral. 石榴子石 as modifier a garnet ring Example sentencesExamples - On the crescents were rubies and garnets in diamond form and in round forms.
- The spring 2005 collection features thin fourteen-karat-gold strands interlaced with small garnets, emeralds, pink tourmalines, and other stones.
- Think of semi-precious stones such as garnets, topaz, amethyst, aquamarine as much for their range of hues as for the way they hold the light, infusing it with shimmering color.
- Emeralds, rubies, diamonds, blue sapphire, pearls, yellow sapphire, cat's eye, garnets, amethyst, jade, etc., are just some of the stones which are said to have healing properties.
- Another coiffure ornament from the 1904 display, now vanished but shown in the center of Plate V, consisted of silver filigree, carnelians, garnets, and enamel blackberries and leaves.
- Generally, there was a higher demand for yellow and pink tourmaline, as well as medium to deep blue aquamarine followed by amethyst and pinkish garnets.
- A fellow that he knows showed us a bucketful of aquamarines and two large garnets and then took us for a short walk to the pegmatites on his farm.
- In my next installment of News from Japan, I will be reporting on them as well as on a visit to Kyushu University to see the Ko collection and field trips to collect sakura ishi and rainbow garnets.
- Those little red garnets you see in stores are usually pyrope garnets and green garnets are usually grossularite/grossular.
- In contrast, garnets from Salida, Colorado, are only superficially altered.
- The rocks here are composed of mica schist, and garnets are often found embedded in them.
- She described star garnets from Emerald Creek, Idaho, as opaque.
- Again, it is assumed that readers know aquamarine is beryl, amethyst is quartz, and Iceland spar is calcite but cannot grapple with the complexity of remembering that spessartine and grossular are garnets.
- Rare earth element distributions in the zircons and garnets strongly suggest that the zircon overgrowths formed in equilibrium with garnet.
- He also found particles of gemstones such as corundum, garnet, rutile, and argentite.
- Another garnet, a mixture of pyrope and spessartine, is called malaya garnet in the gem trade.
- There are strings of garnets, opal, turquoise and onyx set in silver at the Jaipur stalls, lac bangles from Rajasthan, silver dipped in gold and even wooden Etikoppakka bangles coloured with vegetable dyes.
- One of the rings on her left hand was set with red garnets and the ring on her right middle finger is unusual as it is cut in an S shape.
- Sapphires, rubies, garnets, and emeralds are all perfectly acceptable, though.
- He said if exploited in the right way Zambia's great variety of gemstones that includes emeralds, amethyst, aquamarines, tourmalines and garnets offered great potential for poverty reduction.
- 1.1Mineralogy Any of a class of silicate minerals including this, which belong to the cubic system and have the general chemical formula A₃B₂(SiO₄)₃ (A and B being respectively divalent and trivalent metals).
〔矿〕含石榴石的硅酸盐矿物 Example sentencesExamples - At the B-Q claims, beryl occurs with dark red garnet, smoky quartz, and black tourmaline in miarolitic cavities in a granite pegmatite dykes that cuts across the foliation of a high-grade metamorphic gneiss.
- That the Fe-Mg equilibrium between garnet and clinopyroxene records high temperatures, indicates that early elemental compositions were preserved through the lower temperature part of the P-T-t path.
- Coexisting MI phases in these rocks include garnet, plagioclase, quartz, tourmaline and fluorite.
- Early attempts applying the Sm-Nd isotope system to garnet and clinopyroxene were encouraging and often yielded dates considered as representing near-peak P-T conditions.
- Most have some collectible minerals such as beryl, garnet, and schorl, and a few have lithium minerals.
OriginMiddle English: probably via Middle Dutch from Old French grenat, from medieval Latin granatus, perhaps from granatum (see pomegranate), because the garnet is similar in color to the pulp of the fruit. |