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Dictionary:

bead

  (bēd) pronunciation
n.
    1. A small, often round piece of material, such as glass, plastic, or wood, that is pierced for stringing or threading.
    2. beads A necklace made of such pieces.
    3. beads Roman Catholic Church. A rosary.
    4. Obsolete. A prayer. Often used in the plural.
  1. A small, round object, especially:
    1. A drop of moisture: beads of sweat.
    2. A bubble of gas in a liquid.
    3. A small metal knob on the muzzle of a firearm, such as a rifle, used for sighting.
  2. A strip of material, usually wood, with one molded edge placed flush against the inner part of a door or window frame.
  3. Architecture.
    1. A decoration consisting of a usually continuous series of small spherical shapes, as on a convex molding.
    2. Beading.
  4. A projecting rim or lip, as on a pneumatic tire.
  5. A line of continuously applied ductile material, such as solder or caulking compound.
  6. Chemistry. A globule of fused borax or other flux used in a bead test.
tr. & intr.v., bead·ed, bead·ing, beads.

To furnish with or collect into beads.

idiom:

draw (or get) a bead on

  1. To take careful aim at.

[Middle English bede, rosary bead, prayer, from Old English bed, bedu, gebed, prayer.]


 
 

(1) A small programming subroutine. A sequence of beads that are strung together is called a "thread."

(2) The insulator surrounding the inner wire of a coaxial cable.



 

n. a small knob forming the front sight of a gun.

draw or get a bead on take aim at.

See the Introduction, Abbreviations and Pronunciation for further details.

 

Small object, usually pierced for stringing. It may be made of virtually any material — wood, shell, bone, seed, nut, metal, stone, glass, or plastic — and is worn or affixed to another object for decorative or, in some cultures, magical purposes. The earliest Egyptian beads (c. 4000 BC) were made of stone, feldspar, lapis lazuli, carnelian, turquoise, hematite, or amethyst and were variously shaped (sphere, cone, shell, animal head). By 3000 – 2000 BC, gold beads in tubular shapes were in use. From the Middle Ages to the 18th century, trade in beads was enormous. Today the richness of beadwork varies with fashion.

For more information on bead, visit Britannica.com.

 


1. A bead molding.
2. A narrow wood strip, molded on one edge, against which a door or window sash closes; a stop bead.
3. A strip of metal or wood used around the periphery of a pane of glass to secure it in a frame, ventilator, or sash; a stop
4. A pearl-shaped carved decoration on moldings or other ornaments, usually in series, or in conjunction with other shapes; a beading. Also see bead and reel molding.
5. A molding decorated with beading; an astragal, 1 or chaplet.
6. Used in combination with other terms to describe the function or position of a beaded molding, such as quirk bead, angle bead, corner bead, etc.
7. The act of carving or running a bead; beading.
8. In metal roofing or flashing, the shape formed by folding a narrow strip of the edge flat or rolling it into a tube in order to stiffen or fasten the metal.
9. A factory-formed light-gauge metal strip having one or two expanded or short perforated flanges and variously shaped noses; used at the perimeter of plastered surface as a casing bead or plaster stop, and at corners to reinforce the edge.10. A hardened drop of excess paint or varnish.11. A narrow, convex strip of sealant, such as caulking or glazing compound. 12. A weld bead.


 
pronunciation

IN BRIEF: A small ball with a hole through the middle.

pronunciation As the string of the necklace broke, she watched each bead hit the floor.

 
Wikipedia: bead
Beads
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Beads

A bead is a small, decorative object that is pierced for threading or stringing. As an alternative to piercing, plastic beads may be Moulded Onto a Thread during manufacturing; these MOT beads are often used for the throw necklaces worn at Mardi Gras. Beads range in size from under a millimeter to over a centimeter or sometimes several centimeters in diameter. Glass, plastic, and stone are probably the most common materials, but beads are also made from bone, horn, ivory, metal, shell, pearl, coral, gemstones, polymer clay, metal clay, resin, synthetic minerals, wood, ceramic, fiber, paper, and seeds. A pair of beads made from Nassarius shells that are approximately 100,000 years old are thought to be the first known examples of jewelery.[1][2]

Beadwork is the craft of making things with beads. Beads can be woven together with specialized thread, strung onto thread or wire, or adhered to a surface (e.g. fabric, clay).

Types of beads

Cloisonné beads
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Cloisonné beads
Dichroic beads (10 mm)
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Dichroic beads (10 mm)

Types of decorative beads include:

Chevron beads

Main article: Chevron bead

Chevron Beads are special glass beads, originally made for the slave trade in Africa by glassmakers in Italy. They are composed of many consecutive layers of colored glass. The initial core is formed in a star-shaped mold, and can have anywhere between five and fifteen points. The next layer of glass conforms to that star shape. Several layers of glass can be applied, either star-shaped or smooth. After all layers have been applied, the glass is drawn out to the desired thickness and when cooled, cut into short segments showing the resulting star pattern at their ends. The ends can be ground to display the chevron pattern. Chevron beads are traditionally composed of red, blue, and white layers, but modern chevrons can be found in any color combination.

Dichroic glass beads

Increasingly, dichroic glass is being used to produce high-end art beads. Dichroic glass has a thin film of metal fused to the surface of the glass, resulting in a surface that has a metallic sheen that changes between two colors when viewed at different angles. Beads can be pressed, or made with traditional lampworking techniques. The metal coating used was origanllay developed by NASA for the space program.

Ethnic beads

Carved Cinnabar lacquer beads
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Carved Cinnabar lacquer beads

Other beads considered trade beads are those made in West Africa, by and for Africans, such as Mauritanian Kiffa beads, and Ghanaian and Nigerian powder glass beads . Other ethnic beads include Tibetan Dzi beads and African-made brass beads. Rudraksha beads are seeds that are customary in India for making Buddhist and Hindu rosaries (malas). Magatama are traditional Japanese beads, and cinnabar was often used for beads in China.

Faux natural beads

Often beads are made to look like a more expensive original material, especially in the case of fake pearls and simulated rocks, minerals, and gemstones. Precious metals and ivory are also imitated.

Tagua nuts from South American are used as an ivory substitute since the natural ivory trade has been restricted worldwide.

Fire polished beads (10 mm) with AB coating
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Fire polished beads (10 mm) with AB coating

Fire-polished beads

shiny beads *sparkle*

Furnace glass beads

Furnace glass beads
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Furnace glass beads

Furnace glass beads are a special type of art bead. They are made using traditional glassworking techniques from Italy that are more often used to make art glass objects. The manufacture of these beads requires a large glass furnace and annealing kiln.

Furnace glass beads, also called cane glass beads, are sliced from long glass rods, often decorated with stripes and other color, also known as canes.

Lampwork beads

Main article: Lampworking

Lampwork beads are made by using a torch to heat a rod of glass and spinning the resulting thread around a metal rod covered in bead release. When the base bead has been formed, other colors of glass can be added to the surface to create many designs.

Lead crystal beads (including Swarovski and Preciosa)

Swarovski crystal beads (6 mm–8 mm), pendant 3 cm
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Swarovski crystal beads (6 mm–8 mm), pendant 3 cm

Swarovski along with Preciosa crystal beads are also prized by jewelers and hobbyists. They are a content high-lead crystal although today production of lead-free crystal is common. Crystals have an incredible sparkle and clarity, and are often multi-faceted to resemble gemstones. Styles and colors go in and out of production, so vintage cuts and colors are often prized with a similarly associated price tag. Swarovski along with Preciosa bicones are the most popular crystal beads in sizes 4 mm and 6 mm. Crystal and Crystal AB are the most common colors. Other Czech companies such as PAS Jablonec make similar styles of crystal beads. Swarovski crystals, Preciosa crystals and similar leaded crystal beads are also known as machine cut crystal. Machine cut crystals are beads, chatons and other crystal items cut by hi-tech precise machines. Thanks to this state of the art machine cut processing the crystal items achieve outstanding geometry and excellent optical parameters. Many lead crystal beads are enhanced with surface coatings. Aurora Borealis, or AB, is a surface coating on the lead crystal bead that diffuses light into a rainbow. Other common surface coatings are vitrail, moonlight, dorado, satin, star shine, heliotrope.

Millefiori beads

Main article: Millefiori

The millefiori technique involves the production of glass canes or rods, known as murrine, with multicolored patterns which are viewable only from the cut ends of the cane. Millefiori beads are made of plain wound glass bead cores and thin slices of cut cane (murrine) which are being pressed into the bead surface, forming mosaic-like patterns, while the glass is still hot. Another name for Millefiori bead is mosaic bead.

Pressed glass beads

Pressed glass beads (matte finish with an AB coating)
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Pressed glass beads (matte finish with an AB coating)

Pressed glass beads are formed by pressing the hot glass into mold to give the bead its shape. Often pressed glass beads are made using machines that stamp the shape from the molten glass. The shapes can have holes punched in virtually any direction.

Seed beads

Main article: Seed bead

Seed beads are uniformly shaped spheroidal or tube shaped beads ranging in size from under a millimetre to several millimetres. "Seed Bead" is a generic term for any small bead. Usually rounded in shape, seed beads are most commonly used for loom and off-loom bead weaving.

Trade beads or Slave beads

Main article: Slave beads

Trade beads are various types of beads made in Europe specifically to be used in the slave trade and other trading in Africa. Chevron beads are a specific, historically important type of trade bead.

References

  1. ^ Shell beads suggest new roots for culture
  2. ^ 82,000-year-old shell beads from North Africa and implications for the origins of modern human behavior

Beck, Horace (1928) "Classification and Nomenclature of Beads and Pendants." Archaeologia 77. (Reprinted by Shumway Publishers York, PA 1981)

See also


 
Translations: Translations for: Bead

Dansk (Danish)
n. - glasperle, træperle
v. tr. - forsyne med perler, trække på snor
v. intr. - danne perler

idioms:

  • take a bead on    tage på kornet

Nederlands (Dutch)
kraal, druppel, knopje, parel, bolletje, (mv) kralenketting, halfbolvormige lijst, kralen, rijgen

Français (French)
n. - perle, grain, collier, goutte (de sueur), bulle, perle (de rosée), guidon (de fusil), (Archit) baguette, cordon de soudure (métal)
v. tr. - orner de perles, perler, (Archit) appliquer une baguette sur
v. intr. - perler, faire la perle, faire chapelet

idioms:

  • get a bead on    viser (qch) avec précision
  • take a bead on    viser (qch/qn) avec précision

Deutsch (German)
n. - Perle, Tropfen
v. - mit Perlen schmücken, aufziehen, perlen

idioms:

  • get a bead on    zielen auf
  • take a bead on    zielen auf

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - χάντρα, πέρλα, σταγόνα, σταγονίδιο, (πληθ.) κομπολόι
v. - σχηματίζω σταγόνες

idioms:

  • take a bead on    φέρνω στο στόχαστρο, σκοπεύω προσεκτικά

Italiano (Italian)
perla, stilla

idioms:

  • draw/take a bead on    prendere di mira qualcuno

Português (Portuguese)
n. - conta (f) de colar, gota (f), massa (f) de mira
v. - moldurar, borbulhar, ornar de conta

idioms:

  • draw/take a bead on    fazer pontaria sobre

Русский (Russian)
бусина, бисер, капля

idioms:

  • draw/take a bead on    аккуратно прицелиться

Español (Spanish)
n. - cuenta, abalorio, gota
v. tr. - contar, gotear
v. intr. - contar, gotear

idioms:

  • get a bead on    apuntar a
  • take a bead on    apuntar a

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - pärla, pärlhalsband, droppe, korn (på gevär)
v. - förse med pärlor, trä upp

中文(简体) (Chinese (Simplified))
珠子, 水珠, 使成串珠状, 用珠装饰, 形成珠状, 起泡

idioms:

  • take a bead on    瞄准, 把...作为靶子

中文(繁體) (Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 珠子, 水珠
v. tr. - 使成串珠狀, 用珠裝飾
v. intr. - 形成珠狀, 起泡

idioms:

  • take a bead on    瞄準, 把...作為靶子

한국어 (Korean)
n. - 구슬, 묵주, 방울
v. tr. - ~을 구슬로 장식하다, ~을 염주처럼 잇다
v. intr. - 구슬처럼 되다, 거품이 일다

idioms:

  • take a bead on    ~을 겨냥하다

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - ビーズ, じゅず, ネックレス, 玉
v. - ビーズで飾る, 玉のように付く

idioms:

  • draw/take a bead on    …にねらいを定める

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) خرزة, زخرفه معماريه (فعل) نضد الخرز أو رصع بالخرز‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮חרוז, טיפה, אגל, בליטה קטנה בכוונת הקדמית של רובה, עקב הצמיג, כוונת קדמית‬
v. tr. - ‮קישט בחרוזים, יצר חרוזים‬
v. intr. - ‮חרוז, טיפה, אגל, בליטה קטנה בכוונת הקדמית של רובה, נוצר (אגל זיעה)‬


 
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American Sign Language
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