| 释义 | ag·ate I. \ˈagə̇t, ˈaig-\ noun
 (-s)
 Etymology: Middle French, from Latin achates, from Greek achatēs
 1.  : a fine-grained chalcedony frequently mixed with opal and having various colors arranged in stripes or bands, blended in clouds, or showing mosslike forms — see fortification agate, moss agate
 2. obsolete  : a very small person
 < I was never manned with an agate till now — Shakespeare >
 3.  : something made of or fitted with agate: as
 a.  : a drawplate having a drilled eye of agate used by gold-wire drawers
 b.  : a bookbinder's burnisher with an agate tip
 c.  : a playing marble of agate or of glass resembling agate
 4.  : a size of type between pearl and nonpareil, approximately 5 1/2 point — called also ruby; compare point system
 5.  : iron-oxide red
 II. adjective
 : of or resembling agate; especially  : of the color of agate
 < his brown agate eyes — Oscar Wilde >
 III. \əˈgāt\ adverb (or adjective)
 Etymology: a- (I) + gate (way)
 1. dialect Britain  : on the way : in motion
 2. dialect Britain
 a.  : going on : astir
 b.  : amiss, wrong
 < what's agate now >
 |