Marble
Marble (mar"b'l) , noun
[Old English marbel, marbre, French marbre, Latin marmor, from Greek ma`rmaros, from marmai`rein to sparkle, flash. Compare Marmoreal.]
Breccia marble consists of limestone fragments cemented together. -- Ruin marble, when polished, shows forms resembling ruins, due to disseminated iron oxide. -- Shell marble contains fossil shells. -- Statuary marble is a pure, white, fine-grained kind, including Parian (from Paros) and Carrara marble. If coarsely granular it is called saccharoidal.
Marble is also much used in self-explaining compounds; when used figuratively in compounds it commonly means, hard, cold, destitute of compassion or feeling; as, marble-breasted, marble-faced, marble-hearted.
Marble , adjective
Marble , transitive verb
[Compare French marbrer. See Marble, n.]