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(91) For a final suggestion, how about white tiles, black diamonds and gold lurex outlines!
(92) She had the diamond, which is surrounded by small white diamonds in a yellow-gold filigree setting, made into a stickpin.
(93) Lydia Glasher writes that the wearer of these diamonds will be cursed by the wrong she did.
(94) Dawn brings a gift of spider webs flashing diamonds on sea-grey gorse.
(95) The floor is of white and grey marble patterned with black circles and diamonds.
(96) Each piece is individually made in solid gold and set with the world's finest alternative to diamonds.
(97) The rivers of eastern Sierra Leone contain some of the most easily mined and plentiful supplies of diamonds on the planet.
(98) Of the 26,000 carats of diamonds dispatched, over 23,000 carats were recovered, a success rate of over 90%.
(99) Grandfather had been rich enough to buy the many diamonds it took to make it up.
(99) Sentencedict.com is a sentence dictionary, on which you can find nice sentences for a large number of words.
(100) Many soldiers were also believed to have exchanged their weapons for diamonds from the rebels.
(101) The distance between the black diamonds seems longer than their diagonals.
(102) The air glitters like diamonds and the night air is like warm honey.
(103) And under the plate, among the spinning wheels, diamonds and rubies do battle against friction.
(104) More emphasis is being placed on Ratner's position as a gold jewellery specialist and Ernest Jones is being pushed for diamonds.
(105) Shining beads of silver and jet looped in the sunlight of space - but now they were blue diamonds on cobalt.
(106) The move is expected to lead to a huge boost in the supply of diamonds.
(107) This was followed last year by the announcement that diamonds have been found in dust clouds surrounding forming stars.
(108) It was gold, in the shape of a large M, encrusted with diamonds.
(109) There was, in her cupboard, a Golden Cap, with a circle of diamonds and rubies running round it.
(110) A night lit up by gowns covered with glitter and the flash of borrowed diamonds the size of the Hale-Bopp comet.
(111) It is the heavy brass diamonds upon my window, the security grilles; when did I put them there?
(112) So much is this the case that the best emeralds exceed diamonds of comparable size in value.
(113) Now the same diamonds are afforded by a television star or a talented harlot.
(114) The usual thing was to hire diamonds from the court jeweller for the coronation and then return them.
(115) Despite an enormous amount of effort it was not until the 1950s that diamonds were successfully synthesised.
(116) The team were trudging off the pitch, the diamonds on their shirt-sleeves having long since lost their lustre.
(117) The stones were large, being the incredibly rare blue milk diamonds from the clay basins of Mithos.
(118) Some are streetlamps, some are stars, but all shine like crazy diamonds.
(119) He ought to have bought her diamonds, he thought later.
(120) Although graphite and diamond both exist at ordinary temperatures and pressures, diamonds are actually unstable and are continuously reverting to graphite.
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