ormolu

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English

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Ormolu clock and candelabra

Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From French or moulu (literally ground gold).

Pronunciation

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Noun

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ormolu (countable and uncountable, plural ormolus)

  1. Golden or gilded brass or bronze used for decorative purposes.
    • 1840, Frances Trollope, “Practical Information Carefully Obtained, and Promptly Acted upon— []”, in The Widow Married; [], volume III, London: Henry Colburn, [], →OCLC, page 2:
      Had he deemed it "wisest, best," Mr. O'Donagough was not without the means of furnishing a splendid mansion in very showy style, and yet not leaving a single morsel of lacker, or or-molu, unpaid for.
    • 2023 September 23, Lauren Indvik, “God is in the details”, in FT Weekend, Life & Arts, page 3:
      It is an old-fashioned space of pink-and-green trellis carpet and French ormolu, half-concealed by heavy brocade curtains.

Adjective

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ormolu (not comparable)

  1. Made from golden or gilded brass or bronze.
    • 1888, Henry James, The Reverberator, Macmillan and Co.:
      At one of the ormolu tables, near a lamp with a pink shade, Gaston insisted on making at least a partial statement.
    • 1997 May 17, Marianne Macdonald, “Who is Paul Theroux?”, in Independent (UK)[1]:
      "He [R. L. Stevenson] took his mother?" I repeated, off guard, and he replied, turning a quick back flip of satisfaction, "Yeah, and his ormolu clock, and all his furniture from Edinburgh."

Verb

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ormolu (third-person singular simple present ormolus, present participle ormoluing, simple past and past participle ormolued)

  1. To decorate with gilded ormolu articles.
    • 1840, Edgar Allan Poe, The Philosophy of Furniture:
      But I have seen apartments in the tenure of Americans—men of exceedingly moderate means yet rara aves of good taste—which, in negative merit at least, might vie with any of the or-molued cabinets of our friends across the water.