Then he gave a posy to a fifth and he recited these two couplets, "Wands of green chrysolite bare issue, which * Were fruits like ingots of the growing gold.
As though the bud were ruby-stone and girded all around * With chrysolite and held within a little hoard of gold.
There is a zone of chrysolite dikes extending from Mitchell county to Union county, Georgia, in which, at various places, corundum has been struck, but not generally in sufficient quantity to pay for mining.
The chrysolite of the jeweler is usually of a yellower green.
True olivine (the peridot or the chrysolite of the trade) is of a fine leaf-green or bottle-green shade in the peridot.
True olivine (the peridot and thechrysolite of the trade).
The single mention of chrysolite is much more impressive: If heaven would make me such another world, Of one entire and perfect chrysolite!
Chrysolite (peridot, or olivine) was regarded in Shakespeare's time and earlier as of exceptional rarity.
The true chrysoliteof the modern mineralogist is a magnesium silicate, referable to the species olivine.
Chrysoberyl is often mistaken by its colour for chrysolite (q.
Mu'awiyah answered, 'Wottest thou of any city founded by man which is builded of gold and silver, the pillars whereof are of chrysolite and rubies and its gravel pearls and balls of musk and ambergris and saffron?
Go ye forth therefore to the goodliest tract on earth and the most spacious and build me there a city of gold and silver, whose gravel shall be chrysolite and rubies and pearls; and for support of its vaults make pillars of jasper.
A black, greenish, or brownish mineral of the chrysolite group.
The topaz and chrysolite were reported to lose their brilliancy when placed in liquid that contains poison.
An eruptive rock characterized by the presence of chrysolite (peridot).
Defn: An eruptive rock characterized by the presence ofchrysolite (peridot).
According to some, the name is from Topazos, a small island in the Red Sea, where the Romans obtained a stone which they called by this name, but which is the chrysolite of the moderns.
Defn: A black, greenish, or brownish mineral of the chrysolite group.
Chrysolite sometimes closely resembles quartz, but its green color usually suffices to distinguish it.
The Chrysolite was close-hauled on the starboard tack, and was making good headway under a clinking breeze.
He sees the whole canvas aback, and yet the Chrysolite drifts on.
Four months later the Chrysolitewas unloading a general cargo in Mauritius harbour.
My brother and I have been thinking matters over, and we've really been obliged to confess, for conscience' sake, that the Chrysolite is getting old.
The only boat on board the Chrysolite worth launching was the life-boat, which stood bottom upward between the main and mizzen masts.
But the men were already at their stations, and in five minutes more the Chrysolite was heading northeast again.
So that, with her canvas spread in an unwavering breeze, the Chrysolite was a stately creature and "a thing of beauty.
You've made a capital passage, and freighted the Chrysolite well.
See; the Chrysolite is insured in the Jupiter Insurance Company for nine thousand pounds.
The helm is put down, and quickly the Chrysolite veers round in process of reaching the other tack.
Although the Chrysolite carried five boats, no less than four of them were unseaworthy.
The other Brazil chrysolite is straw coloured, with a tinge of beautiful green, producing a very fine effect: it is extremely hard, and takes an excellent polish.
Those gleaming, chrysolite orbs flashed a full upward glare in the chevalier's face.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "chrysolite" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: diamond; emerald; jade; ruby; sapphire; stone; transparency