"The Gilded Six Bits" by Zora Neale Hurston explores themes of love, betrayal, and forgiveness within an African American community in Florida. The title refers to the idea of something appearing shiny on the surface but being deceptively valuable. Through the characters of Joe and Missie May, Hurston delves into the complexities of relationships and the impact of material wealth.
"Gilded" means coated with gold. The original spelling you used, guilded, would be very unusual, but it could mean a person who belongs to a guild.
A bird in a gilded cage is a woman "kept" in a nice apartment by a wealthy man, so the gilded cage, by extension, means a relatively comfortable kind of servitude or bondage.
'dorado' means 'gilded', with feminine 'dorada' '-itas' is the diminutive feminine plural, so 'doraditas' would mean 'little gilded (female) things' 'golden girls'?
The gilt; the gilded one/male
It's a girl's baby name that means, "gilded"
If by "gilded" you mean to coat something in a very fine coat of gold leaf or paint then here you go: "The artist gilded the vase." However, if you meant "gilded" as something that is rich looking on the inside, but cheap on the inside then this would be an appropriate sentence: "The statue appeared to be worth a lot of money, but in fact it was just gilded.".
Gilding is gold plating; normally on silver.
I think you mean "two bits" like the litte song, "Shave and a haircut, two bits." Two bits is a quarter, twenty five cents.
Eight bits in a byte.
In ASCII encoding, if that's what you mean by "bits": 110110011011111110110110010100100000111100111011111110101 That's "love you", in ASCII.
If by gilded you mean the yellow braids or "fringe", then they signify nothing. They have the golden braids along the border for decorative purposes only. They are to be used indoors, for display, and for parades only.
In bits and pieces