jewelry
IPA: dʒˈuʌɫri
noun
- US standard spelling of jewellery. [Collectively, personal ornamentation such as rings, necklaces, brooches and bracelets, made of precious metals and sometimes set with gemstones.]
verb
- (intransitive) To make jewelry.
- (intransitive) To adorn with jewelry or make into jewelry.
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Examples of "jewelry" in Sentences
- The term jewelry started from the Latin word "jocale" which means a plaything.
- In 2006, she started what she described as a jewelry line made of trash and recycled materials.
- The jewelry is way under $100 and the bags are about $120 but almost everything is in that range.
- Rachel Zoe's jacket and shoes are Louis Vuitton, jeans are Seven For All Mankind, and jewelry is vintage.
- Actors are also avid people watchers, making note of the way they hold their bodies, have done their hair, chosen certain jewelry or items to carry with them.
- Investors that have flocked to gold this year will likely turn to other asset classes for better returns, leaving too few buyers to offset the falloff in jewelry demand, the bank said in a report.
- But I've seen tourists and expats dressed like peacocks, strutting their stuff, dripping in jewelry, with all their valuables in flimsy fanny packs or purses and they are neon signs for "please rob me".
- Although in the trailer we barely get to see a glimpse of the ring, the jewelry is already on sale, available in three prices: fashion for $35, fine for $479 and genuine, which is in fact a real diamond ring and costs about $1979.
- They included a gun case embroidered with "Sarah" on it sent from Tennessee; a piece of glass elephant jewelry from a California woman, an embroidered cross-stitched blanket entitled "The Special Child" from a Texas woman; and a hand-painted plate with Palin's picture on from a stoneware studio in Kansas.
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