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Games & Quizzes
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Make correct pairs from two columns
PERFECT HITS | {{lyricTraining.stats.PERFECT_HITS}} | +{{lyricTraining.stats.PERFECT_HITS * 20}} |
HITS | {{lyricTraining.stats.HITS}} | +{{lyricTraining.stats.HITS * 10}} |
LONGEST STREAK | {{lyricTraining.stats.LONGEST_STREAKS}} | +{{lyricTraining.stats.LONGEST_STREAKS * 10}} |
REMAINING TIME | {{lyricTraining.timeout / 1000}}s | +{{lyricTraining.timeout / 1000}} |
TOTAL | +{{lyricTraining.exp}} |
How to use "crystal" in a sentence?
/ˈkristl/
adjective
clear and transparent.
noun
A solid formed by the solidification of a chemical.
A stimulant drug in powdered form, often methamphetamine.
A stimulant drug in powdered form, often methamphetamine.
An early type of radio. The first type of radio had only five components: an ...
An early type of radio. The first type of radio had only five components: an antenna that picked up the signal, a wire tuning coil with which the listener selected the station, an earphone to hear the broadcast, a ground wire to dissipate the electricity, and at the heart of the apparatus, a crystal detector that produced the audible signal. The crystal was a tiny chip of crystalline ore or stone such as galena. Generations of youths built the sets from scratch and spent hours hunched over the device to hear broadcasts from nearby stations. The reception range tended to be limited, so the introduction of diode tubes that increased reception marked the end of crystal sets' popularity.
A means of predicting the future, as in The term is a figurative use of the ...
A means of predicting the future, as in The term is a figurative use of the crystal or glass ball used by fortune-tellers. [c. 1900]
Transparently obvious. This simile (clear as crystal) dates from biblical ti ...
Transparently obvious. This simile (clear as crystal) dates from biblical times. In the Book of Revelation the writer describes the great city of Jerusalem as “having the glory of God; and her light was like unto a stone most precious, even like a jasper stone, clear as crystal” (21:11). The term appealed to numerous medieval poets and crops up in their ballads. By the time Dickens (in 1870) and Arthur Conan Doyle (in 1893) used it, it was a cliché.