jasper (bir kalsedon çeşidi)

listen to the pronunciation of jasper (bir kalsedon çeşidi)
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jasper
A wasp. (West Country dialects, Somerset County)
Jasperware pottery
A person, a guy, especially seen as naïve or simple

That jasper,” sniggered Darby, “never pulled out his ‘dummy’ for nothing but pissing, I bet you!”.

Any bright-coloured kind of chalcedony apart from cornelian
Jasper ware
Cryptocrystalline silica Composed of extremely fine (submicroscopic) silica crystals
A dull quartz usually yellow, brown, or red More info - http: //www minerals net/mineral/silicate/tecto/quartz/varietys/jasper htm
A wasp
Town of Jasper is located west of Caliban between the mountains the great desert See also: Jasper detail map
stoneware body known for its fine soft finish developed by Josiah Wedgwood
a stoneware body, either white or colored, noteworthy for its fine, soft finish This type of ware was first developed by Josiah Wedgwood, and its best known form today is the popular blue and white ware by Wedgwood
An opaque, impure variety of quartz, of red, yellow, and other dull colors, breaking with a smooth surface
{i} precious stone which is usually red in color
An opaque, impure variety of quartz, of red, yellow, and other dull colors, breaking conchoidally with a smooth surface
A semiprecious stone of various colors The jasper mentioned in the Bible was probably green, or else clear
A stoneware body, either white or coloured, noteworthy for its fine, soft finish This type of ware was first developed by Josiah Wedgwood and its best known form today is the popular blue and white ware by Wedgwood
Opaque, fine-grained or dense variety of the silica mineral chert that exhibits various colours, but chiefly brick red to brownish red. Long used for jewelry and ornamentation, it has a dull lustre but takes a fine polish; its physical properties are those of quartz. Jasper is common and widely distributed, occurring in the Ural Mountains, North Africa, Sicily, Germany, and elsewhere. For thousands of years, black jasper was used to test gold-silver alloys for their gold content. Rubbing the alloys on the stone, called a touchstone, produces a streak the colour of which determines the gold content within 1 part in 100. Jasper National Park Johns Jasper Jaspers Karl Theodor
an opaque form of quartz; red or yellow or brown or dark green in color; used for ornamentation or as a gemstone
jasper (bir kalsedon çeşidi)