Rhinestones take their name from the river Rhine in Europe, where they were first discovered in the river. Today it usually means any inexpensive transparent stone. They are usually used in very inexpensive baubles. The clear ones are sometimes used in place of diamonds, although these have been replaced by Cubic Zirconia in recent years. Cubic Zirconia is a specific type of manufactured stone that is supposed to look like a diamond. Some of them are very cheap and unrealistic looking, while others can be quite expensive and very well made.
Father Christmas is one of the many alternative names for Santa Claus.
The collective noun for a group of diamonds is a cluster.
Diamonesk diamonds are not real diamonds. They are stones that are made to look like real diamonds. They are a brand of diamond ring.
Ct stands for carat, the "weight" of the diamonds.
An antonym for the word artificial in the word natural. :)
Diamonds can be found naturally occuring in a range of colors, including black diamonds. They are not artificially made.
You can find the names for many famous diamonds below.
Diamonds were not invented; beautiful diamonds are natural gems. But from many years artificial diamonds are produced for industrial goals.
In theory, yes. There are companies that can make artificial diamonds out of any carbon material.
Artificial?
Alternative/Indie Pop.
Some of the Indian artificial satellites include INSAT series, GSAT series, Cartosat series, Chandrayaan-1, Chandrayaan-2, and Mangalyaan.
By artificial, one must assume that you mean not-natural diamonds, but diamonds formed in a laboratory. The difference is money. Natural diamonds are always more expensive than diamonds formed in a laboratory, given that all the elements about the stone are equal: cut, clarity, carat weight and colour. A certified gemologist will always be able to determine the origin of a diamond.
Only one advantage: its considerably lesser value.
i ment it to be "who are the actors names in Artificial Intellagence"?
With advancements in technology, scientists can now produce diamonds in laboratories that possess the same chemical and physical properties as natural diamonds
Yes.