Ochre in A Sentence

    1

    Copper, mercury, and iron ores, as also pure copper, ochre and sulphur, are found in the peninsula.

    2

    Cushions in natural tones of rust, ochre, and forest green reflect the colors in nature.

    3

    Depending on the color of skin you are trying to paint, you could add more flake white with a touch of yellow ochre.

    4

    Discreet seating areas are created with curved upholstered banquettes in ochre Lelievre fabric, covered with Andrew Martin silk velvets.

    5

    Featuring shades of auburn, blue, and understated ochre, these Kipling bags are the ideal accessories for nostalgic fashions and financially insolvent college students.

    6

    For blushing color, red ochre was ground and mixed with water to stain the lips and cheeks.

    7

    Gault); (5) oxides of iron (staining the clay bright red when ferric oxide, red ochre; yellow when hydrous, e.g.

    8

    He stood high 3 "Reddle or Red Ochre from the Forest of Dean in Gloucestershire is very little inferior to the Sort brought from the Island of Ormuz in the Persian Gulph and so much valued and used by our Painters under the name of Indian Red" (Sir John Hill, Theophrastus's History of Stones, London, 2774).

    9

    Here is a particularly fine and subtly modulated surface - predominantly gray but with accents of ochre and rose, sage and sky.

    10

    Its walls are painted a soft ochre, its windows set off by pretty blue shutters.

    11

    Manufactures of ochre, of which there are quarries in the vicinity, and of iron goods are carried on.

    12

    Minerals which were not mined commercially in 1902 include asbestos, which occurs in Spartanburg and Pickens counties; fullers'-earth; graphite in Spartanburg and Greenville counties; iron ores in the north and north-west portions of the state; iron pyrites in Spartanburg and York counties; talc, bismuth, ochre, pyrites, ' galena, brown coal, malachite, phosphate of lead and barytes.

    13

    Molybdenum occurs in nature chiefly as the minerals molybdenite (MoS 2) and wulfenite (PbMo04), and more rarely as molybdic ochre (Moos) and ilsemannite; it also occurs in many iron ores.

    14

    Ochre is the color that's assigned to this element and can be used in the three sectors of your home as a symbol of this elemental energy.

    15

    Ochre, or mineral paint, and mineral waters, too, are widely distributed.

    16

    Other industries are brewing, printing and iron-founding, and there are ochre and iron mines in the neighbourhood.

    17

    Pottery, fire, ochre and brick clays are abundant, the first two mainly in the eastern part of the state.

    18

    Red ochre, for which there is only a limited market, is mined on Ormuz, Abu Musa and other islands in the Gulf; salt, as deposits, on Ormuz and Qishm I., and by evaporation, near Mohammerah, Fao and elsewhere on both sides of the Gulf; gypsum is widely distributed throughout the Gulf; iron, as haematite and pyrites, widely found through the Ormuz series.

    19

    Rich, warm earth tones in colors such as wheat, ochre and crimson red would work in this type of kitchen.

    20

    The colony of Otago (from a native word meaning ochre, which was found here and highly prized by the Maoris as a pigment for the body when preparing for battle) was founded as the chief town of the Otago settlement by settlers sent out under the auspices of the lay association of the Free Church of Scotland in 1848.

    21

    The colors were shades of pale ochre and sand.

    22

    The contact being thus reddened showed where the face had to be further dressed away; and this process was continued until the ochre touched points not more than an inch apart all over the joint faces, many square feet in area.

    23

    The design was pricked through from the traced plan onto the fresh bed, the pricked holes joined up using red ochre.

    24

    The exterior stonework of the church used to be colored yellow " ochre ".

    25

    The fabric is a marl clay ware decorated with red ochre paint.

    26

    The five-story structure is made of cream-colored Indiana limestone topped with an ochre terra cotta tile roof.

    27

    The flatness of faces of stone or rock (both granite and limestone) was tested by placing a true-plane trial plate, smeared with red ochre, against the dressed surface, as in modern engineer.

    28

    The houses are neatly built of clay, coloured with red ochre, and frequently ornamented with rudely carved pillars.

    29

    The monoxide, PbO, occurs in nature as the mineral lead ochre.

    30

    The oxide, bismuth ochre, Bi 2 O 3, and the sulphide, bismuth glance or bismuthite, are also of commercial importance.

    31

    The range of hues for the yellow family can range from deep bold golds to muted ochre.

    32

    The silt is throughout a deep ochre or rust color.

    33

    The state contains deposits of iron, gypsum, marl, phosphate, lignite, ochre, glass-sand, tripoli, fuller's earth, limestones and sandstones; and there are small gas flows in the Yazoo Delta.

    34

    The unpleasing effect of this anomalous arrangement is greatly aggravated by the lower part of each column being almost always coloured with red or yellow ochre, so as to render the contrast between the two portions still stronger.

    35

    The upper wings are a warm brown ochre with darker edges and the male sports a thin dark ' scent ' line.

    36

    The various kinds of brown and yellow ochre are mixtures of limonite with clay and other impurities; whilst in umber much manganese oxide is present.

    37

    Their produce has gradually decreased since the 17th century, and is now unimportant, but sulphate of copper, iron pyrites, and some gold, silver, sulphur and sulphuric acid, and red ochre are also produced.

    38

    There are white clay and yellow ochre works in different parts of the township. Bennington is the seat of the Vermont state soldiers' home.

    39

    These actions are of extreme importance in nature, as their continuation results in the enormous deposits of bog-iron ore, ochre, and - since Molisch has shown that the iron can be replaced by manganese in some bacteria - of manganese ores.

    40

    These processes may include the sorption of metal and metalloids to colloids in the water column, or ochre deposited on the stream bed.

    41

    This compound occurs in nature as bismuth ochre, and may be prepared artificially by oxidizing the metal at a red heat, or by heating the carbonate, nitrate or hydrate.

    42

    To these may be added emery, steatite, barytes, felspar and ochre, in considerable quantities; excellent lithographic stone is obtained at Solenhofen; and gold and silver are still worked, but to an insignificant extent.

    43

    Truth rather than fancy was that much of his much, much older skeleton was stained by blood tinted ochre pigment.

    44

    Yellow and red ochre mixed with grease are coarsely smeared over the bodies, grey in coarse patterns and white in fine patterns resembling tattoo marks.

    45

    You may want to add a few splashes of fire colors such as gold or red with ochre.