English language

How to pronounce diamante in English?

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Type Words
Synonyms sequin, spangle
Type of adornment
Type Words
Type of cloth, fabric, material, textile

Examples of diamante

diamante
It's got beautiful signature billowing sleeves, long train and diamante bustier.
From the metro.co.uk
Diamante in-person to learn more at his cigar lounge on South Oxford Street.
From the fort-greene.thelocal.nytimes.com
The bride wore a strapless white dress with diamante detail also made by Sarah Burton.
From the mirror.co.uk
My mother is in town, her eyes glittering like big Welsh pools of diamante.
From the guardian.co.uk
The giant diamante heels she is wearing look not just painful but potentially lethal.
From the nzherald.co.nz
Diamante is, as its name suggests, an artificial diamond like a rhinestone.
From the yallsjoynt.com
They range from sparkly diamante to vintage glass, shell, wood and ceramic.
From the guardian.co.uk
Diamante looked fantastic on a bloke, especially if you looked like a bit of a bruiser.
From the guardian.co.uk
A pair of oversized pink sunglasses splattered with fake diamante.
From the express.co.uk
More examples
  • Sequin: adornment consisting of a small piece of shiny material used to decorate clothing
  • Fabric covered with glittering ornaments such as sequins or rhinestones
  • A rhinestone or paste or diamante is a diamond simulant made from rock crystal, glass or acrylic.
  • Alternative spelling of diamante
  • An artificial diamond used as adornment, such as a rhinestone; covered in diamante decorations; shiny or iridescent, as if covered in or made of diamonds
  • (Italian via French, "sparkling decoration," cognate with diamond, pronounced dee oh MON tay): A genre of simple concrete poetry consisting of a single unrhymed and untitled stanza with a visual structure shaped like a diamond. ...
  • The diamante, or diamond, poem is a style of poetry made up of 6 lines, using only 13 words, and forms the shape of a diamond. The poem starts with one subject and evolves into a different subject, the opposite of the starting subject.
  • Glass; rhinestone; crystal; lead crystal; paste; faceted imitation diamond usually with a reflective metal foil on the back to reflect light and increase the lustre of the stone