• a b
  • Log In
  • Home
  • Vocabulary
  • Writing
  • Mobile apps
  • Help
  • ©2017 EdictFree.
    All Rights Reserved.
Vocabulary
  • Topic
Help
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy policy
Mobile apps
  • Android
  • Ios
Bright
  • Home
  • Vocabulary
    • Topic
  • Writing

Free Online Dictionary

The home of living English, with more than 820,000 words, meanings and phrases
All Properties select
District 1 District 2 District 7 More

Longman Dictionary English

From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishquicksilverquick‧sil‧ver /ˈkwɪkˌsɪlvə $ -ər/ noun [uncountable] 1 HCE old use the metal mercury2 literary something that is like quicksilver changes or moves quickly in a way that you do not expect His mood changed like quicksilver. —quicksilver adjective his quicksilver temperament
Examples from the Corpus
quicksilver• Beckett's playing is all quicksilver and lyricism with an often sardonic edge.• The essential Gielgud was all quicksilver intelligence.• The old man was a cracked leather bottle trying to contain quicksilver.• Under that flippant attitude he liked to show at Park Crescent was a mind like quicksilver.• It wriggled and squirmed like quicksilver and, apart from that, the box was only just long enough to take it.• The tar on the roads glistened like liquid quicksilver.• Hunt, the team's quicksilver guard, slipped in and made the basket.• the quicksilver beauty of Khan's singing• His eyes had lost their quicksilver fear.• In fact, its core is crystal, shining night and day, veined with quicksilver and gold.
ldoceonline.com
Word of day

May 09, 2025

pencil
noun ˈpensl
Ad
Mobile apps

Browse our dictionary apps today and ensure you are never again lost for words.

Follow
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
Find Out More
  • Contact us
  • Privacy policy
Copyright EdictFree.Com All Rights Reserved.
Design by EdictFree
Copyright EdictFree.Com All Rights Reserved.
Design by EdictFree