Crossword clues for locket
locket
- Keepsake holder
- Necklace hanger
- Memento receptacle
- Tiny portrait holder
- Small ornamental case hung round the neck
- Small keepsake holder
- Place for an adorable heart-shaped photo
- Photo holder on a chain
- Pendant that might hold a photograph
- Old-fashioned keepsake
- Necklace picture case
- Necklace photo case
- Heart-shaped photo holder
- Gift that's heartfelt and often heart-shaped
- Case on a necklace
- Hair holder, sometimes
- Keepsake on a chain
- Heart-shaped item on a chain, say
- A small ornamental case
- Usually contains a picture or a lock of hair and is worn on a necklace
- Case worn on a chain
- Small ornamental case worn on a chain
- Small case - its contents alien?
- Personal jewellery: told to secure it?
- Jewellery item — severe reprimand when directions are reversed
- Picture holder
- Small ornamental case
- Pendant with a picture
- Keepsake with a picture
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Locket \Lock"et\, n. [F. loquet latch, dim. of OF. loc latch, lock; of German origin. See Lock a fastening.]
A small lock; a catch or spring to fasten a necklace or other ornament.
A little case for holding a miniature picture or lock of hair, usually suspended from a necklace or watch chain.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
mid-14c., "iron cross-bar of a window," from Old French loquet "door-handle, bolt, latch," diminutive of loc "lock, latch," from Frankish or some other Germanic source (compare Old Norse lok "fastening, lock;" see lock (n.1)). Meaning "ornamental case with hinged cover" (containing a lock of hair, miniature portrait, etc.) first recorded 1670s.
Wiktionary
n. 1 A pendant that opens to reveal a space used for storing a photograph or other small item. 2 (context archaic English) The upper metallic cap of a sword’s scabbard. 3 A small white marking on a cat's coat.
WordNet
n. a small ornamental case; usually contains a picture or a lock of hair and is worn on a necklace
Wikipedia
A locket is a pendant that opens to reveal a space used for storing a photograph or other small item such as a curl of hair. Lockets are usually given to loved ones on holidays such as Valentine's Day and occasions such as christenings, weddings and, most noticeably during the Victorian Age, funerals.
Lockets are generally worn on chains around the neck and often hold a photo of the person who gave the locket, or they could form part of a charm bracelet. They come in many shapes such as ovals, hearts and circles and are usually made of precious metals such as gold or silver befitting their status as decorative jewellery.
Lockets usually hold only one or two photographs, but some specially made lockets can hold up to eight. Some lockets have been fashioned as 'spinner' lockets, where the bail that attaches to the necklace chain is attached but not fixed to the locket itself which is free to spin. This was a common style in the Victorian Age. Around 1860 memento lockets started to replace mourning rings as the preferred style of mourning jewellery.
Keepsake lockets can also be made with a glass pane at the front so that what is inside can be seen without opening the locket. Such lockets are generally used for items like locks of hair which could fall out and become lost if the locket were repeatedly opened, whereas photograph lockets are generally enclosed on all sides and the photographs are secured by pieces of clear plastic.
Another kind of locket still made was in a filigree style with a small cushion in the centre to which a few drops of perfume should be added. Perfume lockets were popular in eras when personal hygiene was restricted and sweet smelling perfume was used to mask the odour of a person or their companions.
Very rare World War I- and World War II-era British and American military uniform locket buttons exist, containing miniature working compasses.
Locket is a 1986 Bollywood, Action film produced by Tahir Hussain on T.V. Films banner, directed by Ramesh Ahuja. Starring Jeetendra, Rekha, Vinod Mehrain the lead roles and music composed by Bappi Lahari.
Usage examples of "locket".
Jane reached around Amy to pluck a locket on a blue ribbon off the dressing table.
They seemed vaguely familiar to Angelique and she felt strangely drawn to the locket.
That allegory was exactly of the same size as my portrait, and the jeweller who made the locket arranged it in such a manner that no one could suppose the sacred image to be there only for the sake of hiding a profane likeness.
Drew took the locket and studied the yellowing daguerreotype nestled within.
On Twelfth Night, having the locket and chain in my pocket, I went early in the evening to watch near the fine statue erected to the hero Colleoni after he had been poisoned, if history does not deceive us.
I opened up a gross or two of the Brazilians and made Mame put them on--rings, brooches, necklaces, eardrops, bracelets, girdles, and lockets.
And definitely no TVs, stereos, marcasite jewelry, or octagonal gold lockets.
Memo: Scan the locket, use Photoshop to rescale it and print it on paper, then see if the pattern works as a focus when I look at it on a clipboard.
Indignantly Barnacle denied the charge and was about to explain how his ma had hung the locket round his neck just before she popped her clogs, when Mrs McDipper and Mister Levy came back.
Kindly he helped Barnacle with the instrument, and then, when he was satisfied that the boy was happily absorbed, he returned to examining the locket, moving nearer to his window for a better light.
He took the locket and told Barnacle to stay in the cabin with the Colonel and to keep the door bolted and to open it to no one.
From the folds of her black frock, Mammy Venus had drawn forth a length of timeworn leather from which there depended a locket of pressed tin.
He let the ribbon fall and was closing the delicate catch on the locket when Melia came to stand beside him, emitting a little gasp of dismay.
The outer covering of the locket was fashioned of golden filigree, lacelike work of fine strands of twenty-two carat gold wire.