How To Use Nacre In A Sentence

  • Fontaine has prettily set it off, and an anonymous writer has composed it in Latin Anacreontic verses; and at length our Prior has given it with equal gaiety and freedom. Curiosities of Literature, Vol. 1 (of 3)
  • The particle is an irritant, which causes the oyster to produce a lacquer-like substance called nacre. Daily Readings from Love Your Life
  • Another genius discovery from Lebanon: "Trouver la perle rare est une chose, en trouver 26 en est une autre: une Libanaise a eu la surprise de sa vie en découvrant 26 graines nacrées dans une huître dans un restaurant de poisson et fruits de mer dans le sud du pays ." thanks Martin Tuesday, September 09, 2008
  • Then snatching up some of the flowers, which ornamented the table, he swore that Juba should henceforward be called Anacreon, and that he deserved to be crowned with roses by the hand of beauty. Tales and Novels — Volume 03
  • Anacreon", written during this time, had to be performed in the small Theatre de la Foire Saint-Germain (where he directed the performances from 1789-1792) because the grand opera house was closed to him. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 3: Brownson-Clairvaux
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  • Mantle from an oyster with pink nacre on its inner shell will produce a pink pearl, even if it's put into an oyster with a black shell. PEARL COVE
  • FLAMMEA) is not nacreous and could not therefore produce a true pearl, but merely g porcellaneous concretion, which, however, might possess a most attractive tint, possibly pale salmon or orange. Tropic Days
  • This form of the Trochaic is sometimes called Anacreontic, but very erroneously, as Anacreon's metre is quite different.
  • This bit of arable land is let to the surrounding tenants on the conacre principle -- that is, the holders are not even yearly tenants, but have the land let to them for the crop, the season while their potatoes or oats are on the ground. Disturbed Ireland Being the Letters Written During the Winter of 1880-81.
  • nacreous (or pearlescent) clouds looking like mother-of-pearl
  • Unofficial Neal Asher drinking game: take a shot whenever he uses the words "nacreous" or "actinic. REVIEW: Prador Moon by Neal Asher
  • If, despite having your pencils lined up and a fresh piece of paper in your typewriter, or a cool white computer screen in front of you, you find yourself unable to write, it may be because you're not nacreous enough. Writer's Block? Get Nacreous!
  • Throughout the rain of that evening, she saw his body glowing, pale, nacreous under green water. LOOKING FOR THE SPARK
  • My first act, in music strongly characterized, was Tasso; the second in tender harmony, Ovid; and the third, entitled Anacreon, was to partake of the gayety of the dithyrambus. The Confessions of J J Rousseau
  • Shakespeare's last two sonnets are variations on an anacreontic epigram from The Greek Anthology.
  • Two weeks ago an Anacreonian merchant ship came across a derelict battle cruiser of the old Imperial navy.
  • Constantinople had given him a taste for Anacreontic singing, and female society of the questionable kind, a love of strong waters, — the hypocrite looked positively scandalised when I first suggested the subject, — and an off-hand latitudinarian mode of dealing with serious subjects in general. Personal Narrative of a Pilgrimage to Al-Madinah and Meccah
  • The distressed surfaces, with their flinty earth tones, cobalt blues and nacreous whites, hold light like rough alabaster.
  • I am worth more, for it is I who bring them forth, sing them forth - luminous nacreous spheres tumbling forth, scattering on the ground. Valentines, part the first
  • To the Miscellanies succeed the Anacreontics, or paraphrastical translations of some little poems, which pass, however justly, under the name of Anacreon. Lives of the English Poets : Waller, Milton, Cowley
  • I had composed a good number of so - called Anacreontic poems, which, on account of the convenience of the metre, and the lightness of the subject, flowed forth readily enough. Autobiography: Truth and Fiction Relating to My Life
  • For instance, Linacre, the personal physician of Henry VIII, had the been rector of four parishes, a canon at three cathedrals and precentor at York Minster.
  • As in most bivalves, the shell is composed of three layers: the periostracum, the prismatic layer, and the nacre.
  • There is something of the metaphysical about this, and I can't get Abraham Cowley's second Anacreontic, "Drinking", out of my head when I read it. Rain by Don Paterson
  • Nacreous and Noctilucent clouds form not in the part of the atmosphere in which we live, but much higher up, in the stratosphere and mesosphere.
  • That same wind sundered the clouds to reveal a swollen, pocked moon, and a shaft of nacreous moonglow doused the ground before my feet. Shadow Walker
  • {442a} Graphic illustrations of the attitude of Ronsard and his friends to a Greek poet like Anacreon appear in _Anacreon et les Poemes anacreontiques_, _Texte grec avec les Traductions et Imitations des A Life of William Shakespeare with portraits and facsimiles
  • Like nacreous clouds, these usually form slightly above the troposphere, in the dry and ice-free stratosphere.
  • When costs such as bank interest rates and conacre are taken into account, many of these farmers will be left in the red with the banks.
  • The parking lot is full, the grass is covered with cars, there are even cars out on the street, everywhere there are cars, and in each car are people sheened with sweat, going nacreous as onions fried in butter; I can see through their clammy melting skin to the dry dusty dust of their bones. Wine Poetry
  • ‘Witty things, and occasionally Anacreontic: and they have the originality which such a style must naturally possess when carried out by a feminine hand,’ said Ladywell. The Hand of Ethelberta
  • Vapours enchant the distances, bathing peaks in bewitchments of blue and grey of a hundred tones, transforming naked cliffs to amethyst, stretching spectral gauzes across the topazine morning, magnifying the splendour of noon by effacing the horizon, filling the evening with smoke of gold, bronzing the waters, banding the sundown with ghostly purple and green of nacre. Glimpses of Unfamiliar Japan Second Series
  • The poem is set to the music of the British tune, To Anacreon in Heaven.
  • Tomlinson wrote the poetry of the Anacreontic song, which Stafford Smith set to music.
  • Her legs were encased in a sickly green, nacreous material that was solid from the knees down, breaking apart into a delicate lace patterning over her thighs and waist. Crimson Wind
  • Your Anacreon is a very uncommon book; neither London nor Cambridge can supply a copy of that edition. Life Of Johnson
  • The dorsal ligament groove is overlain dorsally and flanked laterally by the nacreous middle shell layer.
  • The mezzeria system of agriculture, which, if not absolutely the same, is extremely similar to that which is known as “conacre,” rendered the lot of the peasant population very far better and more prosperous than that of the tillers of the earth in any of the other provinces. What I Remember
  • An annually changing proportion of pasture and arable land is leased out each year, usually for an eleven-month period, in a traditional system known as conacre.
  • Some days passed before I could rid my thoughts of Thecla of certain impressions belonging to the false Thecla who had initiated me into the anacreontic diversions and fruitions of men and women. The Shadow of the Torturer
  • They are covered with a smooth, safe, nacreous layer to let them slip, pearllike, from our souls without real pain. AMERICAN GODS
  • Lessing's first publication was a volume of Anacreontics, as was Goethe's.
  • The whimsical drunk given to the occasional half-rhymed, fireside anacreontic is a pretty poor relation of the poet.
  • A national survey of letting prices last week showed a big demand for grazing compared to tillage conacre.
  • In places the shale had flaked away giving the tower a mottled appearance; black nacreous scales littered the base of the walls and gleamed among the grasses. She Closed Her Eyes
  • Late in life Broome returned to Greek poetry and published a verse translation of sixteen Anacreontics in several instalments in the Gentleman's Magazine.
  • A solitary spot-light illuminates the stage, bathing the floorboards in a nacreous glow.
  • This combination of calcium carbonate and conchiolin is called nacre or mother-of-pearl.
  • Lovelace, Alexander Brome, and Edward Sherburne also composed anacreontics.
  • [1] I admire the _first_ sincerely, and in turn call upon you to _admire_ the following on Anacreon Moore's new operatic farce, [2] or farcical opera -- call it which you will: The Works of Lord Byron: Letters and Journals. Vol. 2
  • We nevertheless remained a long time at table, where Lebrun recited to us several odes of "Anacreon," which he had translated, and I think I never spent a more amusing evening. Memoirs of Madame Vigée Lebrun
  • Thomas Linacre, physician to King Henry VIII., a man learned in the Greek and Latin languages, and particularly skilful in physick, by which he restored many from a state of languishment and despair to life. Travels in England during the reign of Queen Elizabeth
  • The trade's effort to set a price of 82.50 per tonne for green barley will force many cereal growers out of business as up to 40% of the land being farmed is conacre.
  • A thousand excuses will be made for taking partners, for subletting on the "conacre" and other systems. Disturbed Ireland Being the Letters Written During the Winter of 1880-81.
  • The most common change is new land being rented or existing conacre agreements ending.
  • The oyster coats the sand grain with a silvery shiny layer called nacre.
  • Among the _Port Folio_ gentlemen who may have met "Anacreon" Moore, and who were Dennie's faithful coadjutors, were John Blair Linn, John Shaw, The Philadelphia Magazines and their Contributors 1741-1850
  • The nacre, or mother of pearl, is the innermost layer, which is composed of thin, alternating, laminae (flakes or sheets) of calcium carbonate and an organic material.
  • By letting this conacre land in little patches, a high rent is secured, which the tenants have no option but to promise to pay. Disturbed Ireland Being the Letters Written During the Winter of 1880-81.
  • Recycled glass tiles emit a nacreous sheen that changes throughout the day.
  • With equal acuteness and adaptation to character, he dedicated the poems to the Prince of Wales, an anacreontic hero. English Literature, Considered as an Interpreter of English History Designed as a Manual of Instruction
  • There's no sham there; no deception -- except the iridescence, which is, as you doubtless know, an optical illusion attributable to the intervention of rays of light reflected from microscopic corrugations of the nacreous surface. Bonaventure A Prose Pastoral of Acadian Louisiana
  • I have seen men and women actually fencing with questions put to them by the excellent priest who dwells at Letterfrack, Father McAndrew, who was obliged to exercise all his authority to obtain a straight answer concerning the potato crop grown on a patch of conacre land. Disturbed Ireland Being the Letters Written During the Winter of 1880-81.
  • Natural nacre also benefits from so-called sacrificial ionic bonds between proteins, which break under stress but can reform.
  • In addition, conacre or rented land that is no longer being farmed must be removed from the REPS plan.
  • The lowest of these clouds is nacreous, which normally forms between 10 and 20 miles above the Earth (compared with ice cloud cirrus at around 6 miles).
  • At times the members of certain social clubs gave in these rooms subscription balls of anacreontic tendencies, the feminine element of which was recruited among the popular gay favorites of the period. The French Immortals Series — Complete
  • Stesichoriue graues Camenae: nec siquid olim lusit Anacreon deleuit aetas; spirat adhuc amor10 Song Makes Immortal
  • Interestingly, not all "pearls" are made of nacre, that combination of aragonite (calcium carbonate and conchiolin that is secreted from a mollusk and layered together to form what gemologists call a "nacreous" pearl. Gizmag Emerging Technology Magazine
  • Why wert thou not present to applaud the only one of thy pupils who understood from that moment the expression, "anacreontic," as applied to a bow? The Physiology of Marriage, Complete
  • In the case of conacre there is no requirement to take soil samples provided the planner specifies P limits at or below the target Index level.
  • Now, researchers have designed a synthetic material that mimics both nacre's internal architecture and its strength.
  • Back down they go for several more years, during which time the oyster instinctively surrounds the injected foreign body with nacre, so building up a beautiful pearl.
  • [MYTILUS INCRASSATUS] Shell nacreous, thick, somewhat inflated, marked with concentric lines of growth; anterior margin arched accuminate; posterior rounded, somewhat dilated; umbones acute. Report of the North-Carolina Geological Survey. Agriculture of the Eastern Counties: Together with Descriptions of the Fossils of the Marl Beds
  • In a world that was hostile to their practices and beliefs, the Anacreontic tradition will have given them a more sympathetic imaginary home.
  • The Anacreontic poems were later discovered to have been composed by a number of poets over seven centuries.
  • It gives me pleasure to draw the picture of those ideal amours which every warm-blooded youth of twenty has at one time or other cherished in his thoughts; to substitute virginal charms and graces for vice and harlotry -- and after the manner of those charming heathen poets who have so often filled our dreams with their fancies, to mingle the anacreontic with the idyllic. French and Oriental Love in a Harem
  • Without appearing to suggest anything beyond a trifling blemish in this story, replete as it is with edifying illustrations of the frailties of human nature, it would be well to remember that the helmet shell (CASSIS FLAMMEA) is not nacreous and could not therefore produce a true pearl, but merely g porcellaneous concretion, which, however, might possess a most attractive tint, possibly pale salmon or orange. Tropic Days
  • Mr Parlon said many of these farmers opt to rent their land through the short-term eleven-month conacre system.
  • And is it intended that when Mike, and Thady, and Tim are settled on their new clearings they are to do as they like on them, to subdivide, to sublet, to conacre, to settle their numerous children and their children's children on the original forty-acre farm? Disturbed Ireland Being the Letters Written During the Winter of 1880-81.
  • They're an oyster's coping mechanism - they coat the irritant with smooth, shiny nacre.
  • The word of the yesterday, according to my beloved AWAD, is anacreontic, and it means “celebrating love and drinking.” The downside of success
  • They had been let out under the conacre system, at so much a rood, for the potato season, at rents amounting sometimes to ten or twelve pounds the acre; but nobody would take them now. Castle Richmond
  • As if to correct the one or the other, he thrust his tongue into the nacreous coils of her ear, smothering all the while her breasts with his hands, lest their rocking motion somehow interfere with the process of correction. La insistencia de Jürgen Fauth
  • On occasions he uses conacre to fulfil the requirements of the beet contract.
  • The distressed surfaces, with their flinty earth tones, cobalt blues and nacreous whites, hold light like rough alabaster.
  • Nacreous and Noctilucent clouds form not in the part of the atmosphere in which we live, but much higher up, in the stratosphere and mesosphere.
  • If these are carefully sectioned there may usually be found at the center the remains of certain cestode larvæ whose presence in the oyster caused it to deposit the nacreous layers that make up the pearl. Insects and Diseases A Popular Account of the Way in Which Insects may Spread or Cause some of our Common Diseases
  • The dorsal ligament groove is overlain dorsally and flanked laterally by the nacreous middle shell layer.
  • I began by reading aloud an anacreontic, adding to its beauties by the modulation of my voice, and keenly enjoying her pleasure at finding her work so fair.
  • He is the most fluent, imaginative poet of the eighteenth century and is especially successful in the pastoral and anacreontic styles. Modern Spanish Lyrics
  • The story began when a young man attended a party in Mournacre Hill, a suburb of Leicester.
  • The gap between modern rationality and Stone Age awe was as thin as a layer of nacre spread over the glowing ocean gems. PEARL COVE
  • When the disease appeared, the people who held conacres threw them up, and the potatoes remained undug. The History of the Great Irish Famine of 1847 (3rd ed.) (1902) With Notices of Earlier Irish Famines
  • Printed sources of "The Anacreontic Song," the drinking song that supplied the tune, are in triple meter, as are other, pre - "Banner" songs that use the tune (such as "Adams and Liberty"). Full measures of devotion
  • To the miscellanies succeed the Anacreontiques, or paraphrastical translations of some little poems, which pass, however justly, under the name of Anacreon. Lives of the Poets, Volume 1
  • ‘Written, I presume you mean, in the Anacreontic measure of three feet and a half — spondees and iambics?’ said a gentleman in spectacles, glancing round, and giving emphasis to his inquiry by causing bland glares of a circular shape to proceed from his glasses towards the person interrogated. The Hand of Ethelberta
  • The inside shells of oysters and other shell-forming mollusks are covered with a shiny, lustrous substance called nacre, or mother-of-pearl. Undefined
  • Farmers had a cheap and abundant workforce, based on conacre, a form of bonded labour in return for small plots of potato land.
  • Natural pearls are born quite by chance when the oyster can’t get rid of some particle inside and coats it with layer upon layer of a smooth, hard substance called nacre. Willow
  • The animal then secretes a calcium substance called nacre to protect itself. Boutique Week: Boutique of the Week: Bourdage Pearls, Chicago
  • He seems to have enjoyed to the full the gay and easy life of a courtier, and sung so voluptuously of love and wine and festivity that the term "Anacreontic" has come to be used to characterize all poetry over - redolent of these themes. General History for Colleges and High Schools
  • Three decades earlier, Kokichi Mikimoto, the son of a noodle maker in Toba, Japan, had perfected a method to culture pearls, the process by which a bead or piece of mantle tissue is implanted inside the fleshy part of a mollusk, forcing the creature to secrete an iridescent substance called nacre that forms a pearl. NYT > Home Page
  • They suggested that this species is similar in microstructure to modern unionid bivalves, which are externally prismatic and internally nacreous.
  • She looked like a medical school model made of glass; or more correctly, like a human diatom, translucent and nacreous. DEAD LINES
  • She looked like a medical school model made of glass; or more correctly, like a human diatom, translucent and nacreous. DEAD LINES
  • Committee: "In many instances the conacre tenants have refused to dig the crops, and are already suffering from want of food. The History of the Great Irish Famine of 1847 (3rd ed.) (1902) With Notices of Earlier Irish Famines
  • The peculiar verse of Skelton, styled _skeltonical_, is a sort of English anacreontic. English Literature, Considered as an Interpreter of English History Designed as a Manual of Instruction
  • It requires no prophet's eye to discern that the instant the tenant's son got married he would bring his wife home to his father's roof, and that if the energies of the united family did not suffice to cultivate the whole of the forty acres, part would be let at "conacre," that is, for the period of one harvest, to a man with or without a holding of his own. Disturbed Ireland Being the Letters Written During the Winter of 1880-81.
  • The Anacreontic Song" became popular in the U.S., and after Francis Scott Key composed his 1814 poem, "Defence of Fort McHenry," his brother-in-law saw that the poem would go nicely with the "Anacreontic" melody. The Agonist - thoughtful, global, timely
  • The oyster coats the sand grain with a silvery shiny layer called nacre.
  • Whereas constant or unrequited love had long remained the favourite subject of courtly chanson, more anacreontic, carnal, or satirical themes are exploited in the narrative anecdotes of Marot and his contemporaries.
  • The shell of Microdoma conicum bears an inner nacreous layer and their shell layers resemble those of modern trochoids.
  • There are other ways you can “get nacreous,” however, and thereby jump start the creative process and become the world-famous writer you've always wanted to be. Writer's Block? Get Nacreous!
  • The rest of their living was made either out of a conacre potato patch, for which they were charged a tremendous rent, or eked out by the excursion of one member of the family to England for the reaping season. Disturbed Ireland Being the Letters Written During the Winter of 1880-81.

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