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alabaster
[ al-uh-bas-ter, -bah-ster ]
noun
- a finely granular variety of gypsum, often white and translucent, used for ornamental objects or work, such as lamp bases, figurines, etc.
- Also called Oriental alabaster. a variety of calcite, often banded, used or sold as alabaster.
adjective
- made of alabaster:
an alabaster column.
- resembling alabaster; smooth and white:
her alabaster throat.
alabaster
/ -ˌbæstə; ˈæləˌbɑːstə /
noun
- a fine-grained usually white, opaque, or translucent variety of gypsum used for statues, vases, etc
- a variety of hard semitranslucent calcite, often banded like marble
adjective
- of or resembling alabaster
Derived Forms
- ˌalaˈbastrine, adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of alabaster1
Word History and Origins
Origin of alabaster1
Example Sentences
See also the vignette on title page, copied from an alabaster slab in the Collegio Romano, originally from the Catacombs.
This day Mrs. Russell did give my wife a very fine St. George, in alabaster, which will set out my wife's closett mightily.
Round the chapel, known as the Dean's Chapel, there was a fine copper railing decorated with small alabaster figures.
The form stretched its lovely arms, white as alabaster, and presently the hands rubbed a pair of sleepy eyes.
An elegant monument of alabaster, with a bust of Pepys, taken from his portrait in the National Gallery, was unveiled in 1884.
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