A superfluity of gold is associated with wealth. This means that a person, business, or country has a lot of expendable income and can help the economy.
Midas King Croesus, king of Lydia 560 - 547 BC, is famous for his excessive wealth. People today still use the expression "rich as Croesus".
The rank typically associated with the gold leaf insignia in the army is that of a Major.
The Rich, Banks, Gold, and Silver surnames are often mistakenly associated with wealth.
One valuable metal found in ancient Egypt was gold. Egyptians considered gold to be the skin of the gods and associated it with immortality and eternity. They used gold extensively in religious rituals, jewelry, burial masks, and for decorating palaces and temples.
The Mayan word for gold is "t'zab," which is derived from the Yucatec Maya language. Gold held significant cultural and economic value among the Maya, often associated with luxury and the divine. It was used in jewelry, ornaments, and religious artifacts.
King Midas- had WAY too much gold.
Midas King Croesus, king of Lydia 560 - 547 BC, is famous for his excessive wealth. People today still use the expression "rich as Croesus".
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surfeit, surplus, overload, glut, superfluity
rampant wickedness or overflow of wickedness
Excess language does not make it the rest void.
"Shivanthi Gold Cup" is associated to "Volleyball".
INXS
Beauty, ruby, duty, booty, moody, sooty, tutti, superfluity.
The rank typically associated with the gold leaf insignia in the army is that of a Major.
Gold fever is a colloquialism for the hype associated with a gold rush; it isn't an actual disease.
Green and gold