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Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
diamante

1904, from French diamanté, past participle of diamanter "to set with diamonds," from Old French diamant (see diamond).

Wiktionary
diamante

a. 1 covered in diamante decorations 2 shiny or iridescent, as if covered in or made of diamonds n. an artificial diamond used as adornment, such as a rhinestone

diamanté

n. (alternative spelling of diamante English)

WordNet
diamante

n. adornment consisting of a small piece of shiny material used to decorate clothing [syn: sequin, spangle]

Wikipedia
Diamante

A diamanté (also spelled diamante) is a glittering ornament, such as an artificial jewel (e.g. a rhinestone) or a sequin. Diamante may also refer to the following:

Diamante (EP)

Diamante is an EP by Sasha Sökol, released in 1988.

Diamante (wrestler)

Diamante (born February 14, 1992, in Monclova, Coahuila, Mexico) is a Mexican luchador enmascarado (masked professional wrestler) currently working for the Mexican professional wrestling promotion Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre (CMLL) portraying a tecnico ("good guy") wrestling character. Diamante's real name is not a matter of public record, as is often the case with masked wrestlers in Mexico where their private lives are kept a secret from the wrestling fans. His ring name is Spanish for Diamond

Usage examples of "diamante".

It was diamante only, and that was common, her mother said, and quite unsuitable to give to a child.

And then I thought of trying on her strapless taffeta and her high-heeled diamante sling-backs, just to see how they would look.

The shards that sparkled in its diamante fur lent it an air of ostentatious glamour.

A golden diamante crown sits on his coarse grey hair and small jewels entwine his beard.

He straightened the diamante collar, brushed back his curly hair and strolled over to the desk.

El judío, poco avezado a esas lides, rehuía en vano el contacto y, consciente del desairado rol que jugaba, hablaba nerviosamente de temas que a nadie podían interesar, tales como la futura baja de los diamantes, la imposibilidad de substituir un diamante falso por uno verdadero y otras minucias de boutique.

Había diamantes, rubíes, esmeraldas, zafiros, turquesas y piedras de la luna incrustadas como rutilantes estrellas en un cielo de plata luciente.

At first it looked like the rock was the head of a strangely stable comet, one possessing a solid diamanté tail.