gold
gold [gold golds] noun, adjective BrE [ɡəʊld] NAmE [ɡoʊld] noun 1. uncountable (symb. Au)a chemical element. Gold is a yellow ↑precious metal used for making coins, jewellery, decorative objects, etc •a gold bracelet/ring/watch, etc. •18-carat gold •the country's gold reserves •made of solid/pure gold see also ↑fool's gold 2. uncountable money, jewellery, etc. that is made of gold •His wife was dripping with (= wearing a lot of) gold. 3. uncountable, countable the colour of gold • I love the reds and golds of autumn. 4. uncountable, countable = ↑gold medal • The team look set to win Olympic gold. •He won three golds and a bronze. more at have a heart of gold at ↑heart, the streets are paved with gold at ↑street, strike gold at ↑strike v., worth your/its weight in gold at ↑worth adj. Word Origin: Old English, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch goud and German Gold, from an Indo-European root shared by ↑yellow. Example Bank: •He spent weeks panning for gold in the river. •In the afternoon he struck a rich vein of gold. •She got a gold in the long jump. •She's going for gold this time. •The currency was tied to the gold standard. •The rubies were set in 18-carat gold. •a gold rush town •falling government gold stocks Idioms: ↑all that glitters is not gold ▪ ↑good as gold ▪ ↑pot of gold adjective only before noun bright yellow in colour, like gold • The company name was spelled out in gold letters. Word Origin: Old English, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch goud and German Gold, from an Indo-European root shared by ↑yellow.
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