Noble-opal


noun
1.
.

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  • Nobler

    [noh-buh l] /ˈnoʊ bəl/ adjective, nobler, noblest. 1. distinguished by rank or title. 2. pertaining to persons so distinguished. 3. of, belonging to, or constituting a hereditary class that has special social or political status in a country or state; of or pertaining to the aristocracy. Synonyms: highborn, aristocratic; patrician, blue-blooded. Antonyms: baseborn, lowborn; common, […]

  • Noble-rot

    noun, Winemaking. 1. the fungus Botrytis cinerea, which is cultivated in some winemaking processes, especially in the making of French Sauternes, where the ripened grapes become shriveled as a result of its introduction, thereby concentrating the juice and increasing the sugar content. noun 1. (winemaking) a condition in which grapes are deliberately affected by Botrytis […]

  • Nobles

    [noh-buh l] /ˈnoʊ bəl/ adjective, nobler, noblest. 1. distinguished by rank or title. 2. pertaining to persons so distinguished. 3. of, belonging to, or constituting a hereditary class that has special social or political status in a country or state; of or pertaining to the aristocracy. Synonyms: highborn, aristocratic; patrician, blue-blooded. Antonyms: baseborn, lowborn; common, […]

  • Noble savage

    noun 1. (in romanticism) an idealized view of primitive man noun a primitive human as characterized in literature, representing natural goodness and simplicity when not encumbered by civilization Someone who belongs to an “uncivilized” group or tribe and is considered to be, consequently, more worthy than people who live within civilization. Many writers and thinkers […]

  • Noblesse

    /nəʊˈblɛs/ noun (literary) 1. noble birth or condition 2. the noble class n. early 13c., “noble birth or condition,” from Old French noblece “noble birth, splendor, magnificence” (Modern French noblesse), from Vulgar Latin *nobilitia, from Latin nobilis (see noble (adj.)). French phrase noblesse oblige “privilege entails responsibility” is attested in English first in 1837.


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