Yes.
Some famous diamonds include the Hope Diamond, the Koh-i-Noor Diamond, the Cullinan Diamond, and the Regent Diamond. Each of these diamonds is notable for its size, color, clarity, and historical significance.
Some diamonds that are also used as given names include Tiffany, Marquise, and Emerald.
diamonds
"Conflict diamonds", also called "blood diamonds" is a term coined by pop culture to describe diamonds attained from certain regions in the world where violence is involved in the sale and trade of diamonds.
The ladies and gentlemen who cut diamonds are called diamond cutters. Very few publish their names.
Humans interested in power and money are responsible for conflict diamonds. Other names for these humans are war lords and terrorists.
Diamonds are formed from carbon. Some brown diamonds may contain trace amounts of nickel -- otherwise diamonds do not contain metals.
You can earn diamonds by finishing certain quests. The reward on these quests are diamonds. Or of course by buying them in the store. (I don't recommend that. It's not worth it. You can go on the game without ever using diamonds.)
There are at least four names for square-cut or squar-ish-cut diamonds. Other diamonds may be cut in a square shape, but because the cut was planned to preserve a high carat weight, the name is a custom name.Common square-cut names for diamonds include:PrincessAsscherRadiantCushion
Fake diamonds are known by many names, including but not limited to...Cubic ZirconiumPasteGlassCrystalMoissaniteDiamanteWhite sapphireQuartzand so forth. None are diamond.
Large diamonds, typically more weighty than 14-20 carats, and many larger, earn their names based on who owns them, or who has owned them. Buying a 'large' diamond also buys diamond naming rights.
Not all diamonds have names: usually, large diamonds are named. There are two diamonds in the list, below, described with the word purple. This doesn't mean that there are not more; it simply means that not all purple diamonds are named, and that finding lesser-known purple diamonds requires more than a cursory Internet search.