Search references for TOADSTONE. Phrases containing TOADSTONE
See searches and references containing TOADSTONE!TOADSTONE
Mythical gemstone, actually a fossilised fish tooth
The toadstone, also known as bufonite (from Latin bufo, "toad") and crapaud-stone, is a mythical stone or gem that was thought to be found in the head
Toadstone
Naturally occurring volcanic glass
Bog-wood Ebonite (vulcanite) Gutta-percha Hair Shell Spondylus shell Toadstone Terms Art jewelry Carat (mass) Carat (purity) Finding Fineness Related
Obsidian
Fossilized tree resin
Bog-wood Ebonite (vulcanite) Gutta-percha Hair Shell Spondylus shell Toadstone Terms Art jewelry Carat (mass) Carat (purity) Finding Fineness Related
Amber
Naturally-occurring stone with a hole through it
Pholad borings, other rocks with curious but naturally created holes. Toadstone Paramoudra Grimassi, Raven (2000). Encyclopedia of Wicca & Witchcraft
Adder_stone
Green gem-quality mineral
Bog-wood Ebonite (vulcanite) Gutta-percha Hair Shell Spondylus shell Toadstone Terms Art jewelry Carat (mass) Carat (purity) Finding Fineness Related
Peridot
Mass found trapped in or adjacent to the gastrointestinal system
Enterolith Fecalith Gastrolith Goa stone Gorochana Regurgitalith Snake-stones Toadstone (1603) 79 ER 3 "bezoar stone" at Dorland's Medical Dictionary Bala, Miklosh;
Bezoar
Queen of Scots from 1469 to 1486
assay food at meals. She also owned a ring set with a "paddock stone", a toadstone also valued as an antidote to poison. There was a book of gold leaf for
Margaret of Denmark, Queen of Scotland
Margaret_of_Denmark,_Queen_of_Scotland
Metalworking technique
Bog-wood Ebonite (vulcanite) Gutta-percha Hair Shell Spondylus shell Toadstone Terms Art jewelry Carat (mass) Carat (purity) Finding Fineness Related
Repoussé_and_chasing
Preserved remains or traces of organisms from a past geological age
modern name. Pliny also makes one of the earlier known references to toadstones, thought until the 18th century to be a magical cure for poison originating
Fossil
Jewellery worn for long continuous periods
Bog-wood Ebonite (vulcanite) Gutta-percha Hair Shell Spondylus shell Toadstone Terms Art jewelry Carat (mass) Carat (purity) Finding Fineness Related
Permanent_jewellery
Items of personal adornment
Bog-wood Ebonite (vulcanite) Gutta-percha Hair Shell Spondylus shell Toadstone Terms Art jewelry Carat (mass) Carat (purity) Finding Fineness Related
Jewellery
English cleric and author (died 1625)
attributes to actual animals. He writes, for example, that: True toads have a toadstone in their heads that protects people from poison. Weasels give birth through
Edward_Topsell
Art of attaching gemstones to jewelry
Bog-wood Ebonite (vulcanite) Gutta-percha Hair Shell Spondylus shell Toadstone Terms Art jewelry Carat (mass) Carat (purity) Finding Fineness Related
Stonesetting
Species of amphibian
It was also believed that there was a jewel inside a toad's head, a "toadstone", that when worn as a necklace or ring would warn the wearer of attempts
Common_toad
Treatise on the properties of stones
coral and pearl were also included in this category, comprising amber and toadstone as fossilized substances. Carrying a diamond was recommended to keep limbs
Lapidary_(text)
Hoard of jewellery discovered in London, England
bright coloured gemstones and enamelled gold settings, together with toadstones, cameos, scent bottles, fan holders, crystal tankards and a salt cellar
Cheapside_Hoard
American graphic designer and illustrator
1965) – based on English Harlequinade, OCLC 171051291 A Lodestone and a Toadstone, Irene Elmer (Alfred A. Knopf, 1969), OCLC 50979 Staffan: an old Christmas
Nicolas_Sidjakov
Extinct genus of fishes
2 metres (6.6 ft). The teeth of Scheenstia were historically known as toadstones, and were attributed magical and medicinal properties in medieval Europe
Scheenstia
the middle of the stone, and recovery from snakebite. (Welsh mythology) Toadstone (also Bufonite), a mythical stone thought to be produced by a toad that
List_of_mythological_objects
Bog-wood Ebonite (vulcanite) Gutta-percha Hair Shell Spondylus shell Toadstone Terms Art jewelry Carat (mass) Carat (purity) Finding Fineness Related
Art_in_bronze_and_brass
Winners and shortlists for UK literary prize
2021 Lucy Caldwell All the People Were Mean and Bad Winner Danny Rhodes Toadstone Shortlist Rory Gleeson The Body Audit Shortlist Georgina Harding Night
List of BBC National Short Story Award winners
List_of_BBC_National_Short_Story_Award_winners
Stone or mineral artifact of various types
hopes of providing chronological or cultural markers. Bezoar Madstone Toadstone Tongue stone The brooch of Lorn Archived 2013-08-30 at the Wayback Machine
Charmstone
Musical artist
Random: Deviation (Wildgoose) Laurel Swift: Beam (NECTA Arts) Random: Toadstone (Wildgoose) Whapweasel: Colour (Whapmusic) Faustus: Faustus (Navigator)
Saul_Rose
which includes 60 great pearls and 440 lesser pearls, with a crapault or toadstone, prized as an antidote to poison. Hayes and the Welsh goldsmith Morgan
Cornelis_Hayes
Natural history encyclopedia, published in 1491
Book V, chapter 24. Bezaar – Bezoar Book V, chapter 27. ..... Borax – Toadstone Book V, chapter 30. ..... Calx – Calcium oxide Book V, chapter 33. Celidonius
Hortus_Sanitatis
Caribbean-American jeweler in New York (1912–1993)
Bog-wood Ebonite (vulcanite) Gutta-percha Hair Shell Spondylus shell Toadstone Terms Art jewelry Carat (mass) Carat (purity) Finding Fineness Related
Winifred_Mason
Mineral (Sb(Ta,Nb)O4)
Bog-wood Ebonite (vulcanite) Gutta-percha Hair Shell Spondylus shell Toadstone Terms Art jewelry Carat (mass) Carat (purity) Finding Fineness Related
Stibiotantalite
Mythical gemstone believed to be formed of the solidified urine of the lynx
squabbling, but the absence of physical specimens was soon fatal. Hyraceum Toadstone Walton, 364, quoted Walton, 377 Earle R. Caley and John F.C. Richards
Lyngurium
probably used to assay food at meals. A ring set with a "paddock stone", a toadstone, was also valued as an antidote to poison. A collar "made like swans set
Jewels of James III of Scotland
Jewels_of_James_III_of_Scotland
Island in New Brunswick, Canada
greenstone (a type of trap rock containing hornblende and feldspar), toadstone and amygdaloid. The only mineral rights held by the Crown are for potential
Deer_Island_(New_Brunswick)
Dry valley used for quarrying in the Derbyshire Peak District
Norwich: Geo Abstracts. Arnold-Bemrose, Henry Howe (February 1907). "The Toadstones of Derbyshire: their Field-Relations and Petrography". Quarterly Journal
Great_Rocks_Dale
Study of the relationship between humans and fossils
geodes, but became associated with Neospirifer in parts of South America. Toadstone is now identified as Scheenstia teeth or bezoars. Tonguestone is now identified
Ethnopaleontology
English stockbroker, amateur scientist and art collector
Charles (1824). "Notice Accompanying Specimens of Lead Ore, Found in Toadstone, from near Matlock, Derbyshire". Transactions of the Geological Society
Charles_Stokes_(collector)
TOADSTONE
TOADSTONE
TOADSTONE
TOADSTONE
Girl/Female
Indian
Mother Goddess
Surname or Lastname
English
English : unexplained. Compare Corvin.Americanized spelling of German Gerwin.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Mansell.in some cases perhaps an Americanized spelling of German Munzel, a habitational name from a place so named near Hannover or from Monzel near Trier.
Girl/Female
Tamil
Girl/Female
Tamil
Fair complexioned
Boy/Male
Arabic, Muslim
One who Gives Protection; Protected
Male
French
Variant spelling of Norman French Herluin, ARLUIN means "noble friend" or "noble warrior."
Girl/Female
Indian, Punjabi, Sikh
The Immortal Love of Lord; Immortal Love of God
Female
English
(Aramaic טַבְיְתָ×, Greek: Ταβιθά, Hebrew: צְבִיָּה): Greek name of Aramaic origin, TABITHA means "female gazelle." In the New Testament bible, this is the name of a woman restored to life by Peter. The name was translated as Dorkas in Acts 9:36.
Girl/Female
Arabic, Muslim
Test
TOADSTONE
TOADSTONE
TOADSTONE
TOADSTONE
TOADSTONE
n.
A local name for the igneous rocks of Derbyshire, England; -- said by some to be derived from the German todter stein, meaning dead stone, that is, stone which contains no ores.
n.
An old name for a fossil consisting of the petrified teeth and palatal bones of fishes belonging to the family of Pycnodonts (thick teeth), whose remains occur in the oolite and chalk formations; toadstone; -- so named from a notion that it was originally formed in the head of a toad.
n.
Bufonite, formerly regarded as a precious stone, and worn as a jewel. See Bufonite.