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Gold fever   /goʊld fˈivər/   Listen
noun
Gold  n.  
1.
(Chem.) A metallic element of atomic number 79, constituting the most precious metal used as a common commercial medium of exchange. It has a characteristic yellow color, is one of the heaviest substances known (specific gravity 19.32), is soft, and very malleable and ductile. It is quite unalterable by heat (melting point 1064.4° C), moisture, and most corrosive agents, and therefore well suited for its use in coin and jewelry. Symbol Au (Aurum). Atomic weight 196.97. Note: Native gold contains usually eight to ten per cent of silver, but often much more. As the amount of silver increases, the color becomes whiter and the specific gravity lower. Gold is very widely disseminated, as in the sands of many rivers, but in very small quantity. It usually occurs in quartz veins (gold quartz), in slate and metamorphic rocks, or in sand and alluvial soil, resulting from the disintegration of such rocks. It also occurs associated with other metallic substances, as in auriferous pyrites, and is combined with tellurium in the minerals petzite, calaverite, sylvanite, etc. Pure gold is too soft for ordinary use, and is hardened by alloying with silver and copper, the latter giving a characteristic reddish tinge. (See Carat.) Gold also finds use in gold foil, in the pigment purple of Cassius, and in the chloride, which is used as a toning agent in photography.
2.
Money; riches; wealth. "For me, the gold of France did not seduce."
3.
A yellow color, like that of the metal; as, a flower tipped with gold.
4.
Figuratively, something precious or pure; as, hearts of gold.
Age of gold. See Golden age, under Golden.
Dutch gold, Fool's gold, Gold dust, etc. See under Dutch, Dust, etc.
Gold amalgam, a mineral, found in Columbia and California, composed of gold and mercury.
Gold beater, one whose occupation is to beat gold into gold leaf.
Gold beater's skin, the prepared outside membrane of the large intestine of the ox, used for separating the leaves of metal during the process of gold-beating.
Gold beetle (Zool.), any small gold-colored beetle of the family Chrysomelidae; called also golden beetle.
Gold blocking, printing with gold leaf, as upon a book cover, by means of an engraved block.
Gold cloth. See Cloth of gold, under Cloth.
Gold Coast, a part of the coast of Guinea, in West Africa.
Gold cradle. (Mining) See Cradle, n., 7.
Gold diggings, the places, or region, where gold is found by digging in sand and gravel from which it is separated by washing.
Gold end, a fragment of broken gold or jewelry.
Gold-end man.
(a)
A buyer of old gold or jewelry.
(b)
A goldsmith's apprentice.
(c)
An itinerant jeweler. "I know him not: he looks like a gold-end man."
Gold fever, a popular mania for gold hunting.
Gold field, a region in which are deposits of gold.
Gold finder.
(a)
One who finds gold.
(b)
One who empties privies. (Obs. & Low)
Gold flower, a composite plant with dry and persistent yellow radiating involucral scales, the Helichrysum Stoechas of Southern Europe. There are many South African species of the same genus.
Gold foil, thin sheets of gold, as used by dentists and others. See Gold leaf.
Gold knobs or Gold knoppes (Bot.), buttercups.
Gold lace, a kind of lace, made of gold thread.
Gold latten, a thin plate of gold or gilded metal.
Gold leaf, gold beaten into a film of extreme thinness, and used for gilding, etc. It is much thinner than gold foil.
Gold lode (Mining), a gold vein.
Gold mine, a place where gold is obtained by mining operations, as distinguished from diggings, where it is extracted by washing. Cf. Gold diggings (above).
Gold nugget, a lump of gold as found in gold mining or digging; called also a pepito.
Gold paint. See Gold shell.
Gold pheasant, or Golden pheasant. (Zool.) See under Pheasant.
Gold plate, a general name for vessels, dishes, cups, spoons, etc., made of gold.
Gold of pleasure. (Bot.) A plant of the genus Camelina, bearing yellow flowers. C. sativa is sometimes cultivated for the oil of its seeds.
Gold shell.
(a)
A composition of powdered gold or gold leaf, ground up with gum water and spread on shells, for artists' use; called also gold paint.
(b)
(Zool.) A bivalve shell (Anomia glabra) of the Atlantic coast; called also jingle shell and silver shell. See Anomia.
Gold size, a composition used in applying gold leaf.
Gold solder, a kind of solder, often containing twelve parts of gold, two of silver, and four of copper.
Gold stick, the colonel of a regiment of English lifeguards, who attends his sovereign on state occasions; so called from the gilt rod presented to him by the sovereign when he receives his commission as colonel of the regiment. (Eng.)
Gold thread.
(a)
A thread formed by twisting flatted gold over a thread of silk, with a wheel and iron bobbins; spun gold.
(b)
(Bot.) A small evergreen plant (Coptis trifolia), so called from its fibrous yellow roots. It is common in marshy places in the United States.
Gold tissue, a tissue fabric interwoven with gold thread.
Gold tooling, the fixing of gold leaf by a hot tool upon book covers, or the ornamental impression so made.
Gold washings, places where gold found in gravel is separated from lighter material by washing.
Gold worm, a glowworm. (Obs.)
Jeweler's gold, an alloy containing three parts of gold to one of copper.
Mosaic gold. See under Mosaic.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Gold fever" Quotes from Famous Books



... Australia, when the gold fever was at its height, and the marvellous Melbourne of to-day was more like an enlarged camp than anything else, there was a man called Robert Curtis, who arrived in the new land of Ophir with many others to seek his fortune. Mr Curtis ...
— Madame Midas • Fergus Hume

... when the Australian gold fever was hot in the veins of thousands, and fleets of ships were conveying them to that far- off, uncultivated world, a poor old woman landed with the great multitude of rough and reckless men, who were fired to almost frenzy by dreams of ponderous nuggets and golden ...
— A Walk from London to John O'Groat's • Elihu Burritt

... great hoard rose before my eyes, and I computed that I had left behind thirty millions in silver, twenty in gold, and many more in diamonds, pearls, and rubies—then a sort of madness began to work in me. I had the gold fever. ...
— Facino Cane • Honore de Balzac

... a friend of mine named R., who owned a third interest in a factory that belonged to a relative of mine who got the gold fever when I did, and got me to negotiate the sale of his interest in it to him, which I did for $8,000, so he could go to California with me. When he arrived there he proposed to build a brewery. His father had been a brewer in Scotland. He bought a lot, a part of the city ...
— The Adventures of a Forty-niner • Daniel Knower

... who knew no word of English, but who could do better bead-work than any squaw in the tribe, went to live with Warren Rodney when he finished his cabin on Elder Creek. That was before the gold fever reached the Black Hills, and Rodney built the cabin that he might fish and hunt and forget the East and why he left it. There were reasons why he wanted to forget his identity as a white man in his play at being an Indian. In the first flare of youth and the joy of having ...
— Judith Of The Plains • Marie Manning


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