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Figure cup result is unusual
Answer for the clue "Figure cup result is unusual ", 9 letters:
sculpture
Alternative clues for the word sculpture
Word definitions for sculpture in dictionaries
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Sculpture \Sculp"ture\ (?; 135), v. t. [imp. & p. p. Sculptured ; p. pr. & vb. n. Sculpturing .] To form with the chisel on, in, or from, wood, stone, or metal; to carve; to engrave. Sculptured tortoise (Zo["o]l.), a common North American wood tortoise ...
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. a three-dimensional work of plastic art creating figures or designs in three dimensions [syn: carving ]
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Sculpture is a feature of many of the shells of mollusks. It is three-dimensional ornamentation on the outer surface of the shell, as distinct from either the basic shape of the shell itself or the pattern of colouration , if any. Sculpture is a feature ...
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES piece of music/writing/sculpture etc ▪ some unusual pieces of sculpture sculpture park COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ■ ADJECTIVE bronze ▪ The store's bronze sculpture gives customers an insight into the history of Frome. ...
Usage examples of sculpture.
All the house above was still and dark, and he could barely make out by the starlight the piece of white marble bearing the sculptured Agnus Dei whence the house takes its name.
The aisle doorways are plain, but over both are some sculptured figures.
There was so much of her, such incredibly long legs, such an extreme flow of line and volume, Beheim became entranced by the exaggerated perspectives available, gazing up at the equatorial swell of her belly toward the flattened mounds of her breasts with their dark oases of areola and turreted nipples, or down from her breasts toward the unruly pubic tuft between her thighs, in all reminding him by its smoothness of the sand sculpture of a sleeping giantess he had seen years before on a beach in Spain.
It looked like a sculpture collection of Bakelite canisters and wooden boxes.
We were sitting under a baobab tree, a weird, muscled sculpture with branches like roots sprouting white, starlike flowers, drinking the rum and talking about the locals.
There rose a megalithic wall, bedight with sculptured reliefs in riotous profusion.
Gazing at her, Benedict recalled being commissioned to guard a transport of sculptures directed to the London Museum.
Looking once more from the window, Bibbs sculptured for himself--in the vague contortions of the smoke and fog above the roofs--a gigantic figure with feet pedestaled upon the great buildings and shoulders disappearing in the clouds, a colossus of steel and wholly blackened with soot.
They painted or carved the walls with descriptive and symbolic scenes, and crowded their interiors with sarcophagi, cinerary urns, vases, goblets, mirrors, and a thousand other articles covered with paintings and sculptures rich in information of their authors.
Yagharek flattened himself against the wall in the shadow of the sculpture, his whip coiled and ready.
She saw lines and planes so strong that she was reminded of a stone sculpture, straight dark brows over hazel eyes, and a high forehead creased in-pain?
Catching his sudden enthusiasm, Felicia hurried at his side until they reached the room where Anne Darner worked on her sculpture.
Shona decided that they needed marble stairs, too, leading into the hall, and sat on the ordinary wooden stairs making drawings of sculptured banisters and sketches of the sort of clothes Derk should wear.
The rooms were Japanese, the furniture Dutch, heavy claw-and-ball couches adorned with tassels, huge tables made out of solid oak and with lions sculptured at the corners, thick velvet draperies hiding most of the fusuma, the delicate Japanese sliding doors made out of slats and tightly stretched paper.
The obelisks of Luxor may be unrivalled, the sculptures of Medcenet Habu more exquisite, the colossus of Memnonion more gigantic, the paintings of the royal tombs more curious and instructive, but criticism ceases before the multifarious wonders of the halls and courts of Karnak and the mind is open only to one general impression of colossal variety.