Cheap showy jewelry or ornament on clothing.
Sinônimos
Examples for "novelty"
Examples for "novelty"
1The novelty is the pressure since 1989 from central and eastern Europe.
2I shall add one more example for the sake of its novelty.
3These short-term practice effects suggest changes in neural activity with stimulus novelty.
4The present study evaluates whether phenotype may affect spontaneous, non-spatial novelty discrimination.
5The novelty is all superficial; the tradition is all interior and profound.
1Five minutes later the rat appeared, bearing the trinket in its mouth.
2He took the trinket from her, turning it over in his fingers.
3The only trinket which he had was the fragment of a sandwich.
4There in the goblin's hands was the trinket from the duke's house.
5Hastily he lowered the canoe again, and picked up the bright trinket.
1Meanwhile, up the road, the actor Joanna Lumley wants a different bauble.
2The auctioneer held in his hand a gaudy bauble of worldly pleasure.
3Her black eyes gleamed with triumph at the sight of the bauble.
4One last, feeble flicker, and the stone was merely a bauble again.
5Would either of us have brought it here, like some valueless bauble?
1And that bangle was definitely on your right wrist the other night.
2Sir, of course I shall take your advice and get a bangle.
3Bishop Manning leaves, and Dr. Guthrie twirls a bangle on his nose.
4He could remove the bangle, he supposed, just for a moment.
5That rainbow titanium bangle, so snug now on his left wrist.
1Passing through an archway, he found himself in the gaud of the flower-market.
2And now L'Himby, a sometime city of meditation, reduced to gaud and rubble.
3Blood and brains fly in a fan and decorate the doorframe with gaud.
4She flushed first of all with a natural pleasure, the girl delighting in her gaud.
5You are garbed like a herdsman, and you have not a gaud or a jewel to brighten you.
1You wear this fallal on your head, I suppose?
2I am suspicious of these shawls and fallals that Bundaboo seems full of.
3That'll buy Mistress Fenton a few fallals if she's a mind for 'em.
4Look at the backs here deformed by laces and fallals, she went on contemptuously.
5He would have no finery and fallals, he said.
1Knowledge outside the day's work is regarded by most men as a gewgaw.
2Then sprang into existence the tawdry, the common, the gewgaw.
3They'll give ten times the value for some little gewgaw to wear about 'em.
4Such a glittering gewgaw, and not to be seen!
5They spelled epiphany, gaberdine, ichthyology, gewgaw, kaleidoscope, and troubadour.
6Strait a more foolish gewgaw comes in play:
7There is no gewgaw or parade about him, as in some of your dandified young Agas.
8The Maximiser is a cool little gewgaw that plugs in between your keyboard cable and your PC.
9They built lots of homes and packed them with every new gewgaw a potential buyer might dream of.
10Quite out of the gewgaw stage.
11Tremendous numbers of trees, and stone teeth to guard them, and vines fruited with flowers in gewgaw colours.
12At her disposal was wealth without stint, every luxury the soft could desire, every gewgaw the vain could covet.
13The crown of my fathers has shrunk into a gewgaw and a toy,-theirambition and their spirit are undecayed!
14The bad names, fool's play-thing, artful creature, painted bauble, gewgaw, speaking picture, are hard words for your poor Pamela!
15The best efforts of twentieth-century biotechnology are nothing to him, mere cleverness, a gadget, gewgaw, half woman, half cuckoo clock.
16Any little absurd gewgaw or gimcrack they had they disposed in such a way as to make it attract attention most readily.