Definition of Emeraude

1. emerald [n -S] - See also: emerald

Lexicographical Neighbors of Emeraude

emenders
emending
emends
emepronium
emerald
emerald ash borer
emerald ash borers
emerald creeper
emerald green
emerald shiner
emeraldine
emeraldines
emeraldlike
emeralds
emeraud
emeraude (current term)
emeraudes
emerauds
emerg
emerge
emerged
emergence
emergences
emergencies
emergency
emergency-brake
emergency brake
emergency brakes
emergency exit
emergency exits

Literary usage of Emeraude

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Battles of the British Navy by Joseph Allen (1852)
"The struggle for victory lasted thirty-five minutes, at the expiration of which time, the emeraude, having lost her first and second captains, ..."

2. The Painter's Palette: A Theory of Tone Relations, an Instrument of Expression by Denman Waldo Ross (1919)
"The mixture of French Ultramarine with a little Vert emeraude and White ... White, for example, has to be used with Vert emeraude to produce Green in the ..."

3. The Magazine of American History with Notes and Queries by John Austin Stevens, Benjamin Franklin DeCosta, Martha Joanna Lamb, Henry Phelps Johnston, Nathan Gilbert Pond, William Abbatt (1881)
"These parting lines were written at Annapolis, as the vessel which was to convey him to the emeraude was getting under sail. The British Admiral in New York ..."

4. The English Catalogue of Books by Sampson Low (1901)
"Normand, L'emeraude des Incas, adap. by F. Aston AH Wall, 2s. ... Key to Appen. of L'emeraude des Incas, 2s. 6d. net Key to Appen. of La Tour des Maures, ..."

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