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agata

[ag-uh-tuh]

noun

  1. an American art glass having a mottled, glossy, white and rose surface.



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Word History and Origins

Origin of agata1

< Italian: agate < Latin achātēs
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Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Agata is attending with a friend.

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Agata Patyna, representing the migrants, said in written arguments the group included unaccompanied children, women who were pregnant at the time of detention, vulnerable people with mental health conditions and disabilities and victims of trafficking, sexual offences and torture.

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“We can’t make a decision until we see a financial aid package,” said Agata James, a mother of a New York high school senior from Queens.

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Anthony Tommasini traveled to Italy and visited Roncole, Busseto, Sant’Agata and Milan to learn more about Giuseppe Verdi.

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The director L. Frances Henderson based this very personal debut on John D’Agata’s lauded book “About a Mountain,” which deftly yoked the suicide of a teenager in Las Vegas to the Department of Energy’s since-scuttled plans to use Yucca Mountain, 100 miles northwest of that city, as a repository for nuclear waste.

Read more on New York Times

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