Diamonds are not foggy, unless the stone is terribly flawed or included, in which case, its value as a gemstone is not high.
misty - vague - foggy - nebulous - dim - indistinct
It looks foggy :)
Eyeglasses get foggy indoors when warm air meets the cooler surface of the glasses, causing condensation to form. This happens because the surface of the glasses is cooler than the warm air in the room, leading to moisture in the air condensing on the glasses and creating the foggy effect.
dim, hazy, cloudy
Auckland Diamonds was created in 1998.
One difference between Herkimwe diamonds and true diamonds is that the Herkimwe diamonds are softer than true diamonds.
Herkimer diamonds are double-terminated quartz crystals found in Herkimer County, New York, while true diamonds are carbon-based minerals. Herkimer diamonds have a lower hardness rating (7.5) compared to true diamonds (10). Additionally, herkimer diamonds are typically clear or smoky in color, whereas true diamonds exhibit a range of colors depending on impurities.
Yes, there may be are diamonds on Uranus.
If that were true there would be no San Francisco or London either.
If you reverse your statement, it is true: Diamonds are formed from carbon.
No it is not true.
No, it is not true.
Diamonds are products and are traded internationally through the distribution channels for diamonds. This is true whether the diamonds are industrial -- about 80% of all diamonds mined, or gem-quality stones.
true
Yes, it is. It normally means of or having fog (foggy nights, foggy weather), and metaphorically unclear or imprecise (foggy memory).
"Monday will have foggy weather".
Just as is true with any raw material, all natural resources are finite: natural diamonds are finite. However, man-made diamonds can be manufactured from carbon, which makes man-made diamonds potentially infinite.