释义 |
crys·tal I. \ˈkristəl\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English cristal, from Old French, from Latin crystallum, from Greek krystallos — more at crust 1. obsolete : clear ice 2. : quartz that is transparent or nearly so and that is either colorless or only slightly tinged; also : a piece of this material (as one cut for personal ornament or for use in magic art) — called also rock crystal; compare cairngorm, pebble 2; crystal gazing 3. : something (as clear water) resembling crystal in transparency and colorlessness 4. a. : a body formed by the solidification under favorable conditions of a chemical element, a compound, or an isomorphous mixture and having a regularly repeating internal arrangement of its atoms; especially : such a body that has natural external plane faces as a result of the internal structure b. : a substance having certain properties of crystals — see liquid crystals 5. a. : glass of superior quality and often with ornamental cutting : flint glass; also : a piece of this material < a fine dinner set of crystal > b. : a colorless transparent diamond 6. : the glass or transparent plastic that covers the dial of a watch or clock 7. a. : a crystalline material used in a sharply tuned electromechanical transducer often as a frequency-determining element : a quartz plate b. : a class of detector in a radio receiver II. adjective Etymology: Middle English cristal, from cristal, n. 1. : consisting of or resembling crystal : crystalline, clear, transparent, lucid < crystal streams > < the crystal clearness of his arguments > 2. a. : relating to or using a crystal < a crystal radio receiver > b. : utilizing a Rochelle salt or other crystal as the basic conversion mechanism — used especially of a microphone, phonograph pickup, or cutting head III. transitive verb (crystaled or crystalled ; crystaled or crystalled ; crystaling or crystalling ; crystals) : to make into crystal : cover with crystal < the frost that crystaled it over > IV. noun : ice 2 herein ; broadly : methamphetamine in any form when used illicitly |