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agate

/ˈægət/
/ˈægət/
IPA guide

Other forms: agates

Agate is a gemstone that's similar to quartz. Jewelry, including pins and earrings, is sometimes made from agate.

Agate is mainly found in volcanic rock, and it's often distinguished by its lines or bands, a result of silicate material layering as it filled in cracks in these ancient rocks. Agate has long been used for carving ornaments and vessels, including beads, marbles, jewelry, mortars, and pestles. The name agate comes from the Greek akhates, the name of a river in Sicily where the stone was commonly found about 3,000 years ago.

Definitions of agate
  1. noun
    an impure form of quartz consisting of banded chalcedony; used as a gemstone and for making mortars and pestles
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    types:
    moss agate
    an agate resembling moss with brown, black, or green markings
    type of:
    calcedony, chalcedony
    a milky or greyish translucent to transparent quartz
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