Adjectives for Decorations | Words to describe Decorations
Golden
Own
Gay
Moorish
Jewelled
Valuable
Improper
Interior
Green
Rosy
Rich
Floral
Such
Numerous
Original
Handsome
How do you describe Decorations?
- 1. Nothing remains of the original decorations except one carved chimney-piece, an emblazoned shield, and a frescoed portrait of the founder. 🔊
- 2. This specimen is inserted here because of the numerous decorations of apparently unmeaning, or, at least, unexplained, lines. 🔊
- 3. They are rare and valuable decorations, being buttons made of coins, and held together by a link, as our sleeve-buttons. 🔊
- 4. Had not his characters been depraved, like every other part, by improper decorations, they would have deserved uncommon praise. 🔊
- 5. In low music halls we are not surprised by such decorations, for we do not look for truth or any manifestation of delicacy of feeling in such places. 🔊
- 6. So the man went back, and when he reached the palace he found that it had grown much larger, and a great tower had been added, with handsome decorations. 🔊
- 7. So the man went back, and when he got to the door, he found that the whole palace was made of polished marble, with alabaster figures and golden decorations. 🔊
- 8. Two days' hard work would be sufficient for so accomplished a needlewoman as herself to make these original decorations. 🔊
- 9. The money those people spend for red and green decorations at Christmas time, apple-blossoms and pink crepe paper shades in the spring, must be something awful. 🔊
- 10. In the second place, you insisted on the destruction of the fine lion-gate, which my father had adorned with gay decorations; and I let that matter also pass. 🔊
- 11. It also included a larger proportion of the floral decorations which were among the artist's chief gifts. 🔊
- 12. There is a magnificent opera house near the Grand Hotel, whose vast exterior is ornamented with beautiful statuary, medallions, gilding and other rich decorations. 🔊
- 13. The beautiful Moorish decorations of the Alcazar at Segovia had been all but entirely destroyed by fire, attributed to the careless cigar-lighting of the Cadets to whom the structure had been abandoned. 🔊
- 14. It must also be remembered that if light is not freely admitted to an apartment the colours of all the objects which it contains, and of its own decorations if it has any, are sacrificed, for in the absence of light there is no colour. 🔊
- 15. Occasionally these visions were so gorgeous and resplendent that he is accustomed to compare them to the jewelled decorations of the palaces of the genii in the Arabian Nights' Entertainment. 🔊