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Luster   /lˈəstər/   Listen
Luster

noun
1.
A quality that outshines the usual.  Synonyms: brilliancy, lustre, splendor, splendour.
2.
The visual property of something that shines with reflected light.  Synonyms: lustre, sheen, shininess.
3.
A surface coating for ceramics or porcelain.  Synonym: lustre.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Luster" Quotes from Famous Books



... Sphinx ended not with the battle of San Juan Hill, for it cast the luster of its glorious power on the gallant Lieutenant Colonel of the famous regiment of Rough Riders, Theodore Roosevelt, and on him it conferred in time the greatest honor to be achieved on earth, it made him President of the United ...
— Tales of Aztlan • George Hartmann

... Calcutta is also famous as the birthplace of Thackeray, a bust of whom ornaments the art gallery of the Imperial Museum. Scattered about the Maidan are statues of a dozen men whose deeds have shed luster on English arms ...
— The Critic in the Orient • George Hamlin Fitch

... lights Carlia showed rouge on her cheeks, something Dorian had never seen on her before. Her lips seemed redder than ever, and he eyes shone with a bright luster. Mr. Lamont led them to his automobile, and then Dorian remembered the night when this same young man with the same automobile had stopped near Carlia's home. Carlia seated herself with the driver, ...
— Dorian • Nephi Anderson

... me with flings upon my sex. He liked, he said, to have me flash and frown, So he could tease me, and then laugh me down. My storms of wrath amused him very much: He liked to see me go off at a touch; Anger became me—made my color rise, And gave an added luster to my eyes. So he would talk—and so he watched me now, To see the hot ...
— Maurine and Other Poems • Ella Wheeler Wilcox

... powers of art to the utmost. If a great painter could rest in drawing a ship, as he can rest in drawing a piece of drapery, we might sometimes see vessels introduced by the noblest workmen, and treated by them with as much delight as they would show in scattering luster over an embroidered dress, or knitting the links of a coat of mail. But ships cannot be drawn at times of rest. More complicated in their anatomy than the human frame itself, so far as that frame is outwardly discernible; liable to all kinds of strange ...
— The Harbours of England • John Ruskin


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