Official stamp affixed by guilds or assay offices to gold and silver objects.
Sinònims
Examples for "hallmark"
Examples for "hallmark"
1Strong local and regional government is the hallmark of leading EU member-states.
2Today the name FORTUNE is the nationally accepted hallmark of business journalism.
3However, behaviour has not exactly been a hallmark of his player personality.
4Too many people think speed is the hallmark of a good musician.
5Waiting for a product is usually the hallmark of a true fan.
1Their proceedings all bore the hall-mark of natural refinement and good taste.
2If it bears the hall-mark of hoary antiquity, so much the better.
3Inconsistency is the hall-mark of real in distinction from unreal life.
4All other men were the same, stamped with a similar hall-mark.
5This is the hall-mark of Shakespeare, and perhaps of him alone.
6This mele comes to us stamped with the hall-mark of antiquity.
7Don't tell me you haven't caught onto the hall-mark of the Red Desert.
8After all, is not pure pathos the hall-mark of great comedy?
9The sleeping dogs, heaving gently in fawn-coloured beatitude, set upon it the best hall-mark.
10That I am marked with the hall-mark of gentlehood there is no discussion .
11Our laboratories are perhaps the distinguishing hall-mark of our civilization.
12Genuine manhood was the only hall-mark allowed as a standard.
13The hall-mark of so-called "vulgar people" is unrestricted display of uncontrolled emotions.
14These are among the attributes of the exalted, and constitute the hall-mark of the spiritually-minded.
15Nothing in Athens was done without a committee, that ultimate hall-mark of the democratic method.
16There is the hall-mark of the great genius: Unity.
Translations for hall-mark