From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
diamonds
- plural of diamond
diamonds pl (plural only)
- (card games) One of the four suits of playing cards, marked with the symbol ♦.
- (slang) Testicles.
- Synonym: family jewels
one of the four suits of playing cards, marked with the symbol ♦
- Arabic: دِينَارِيّ m (dinari)
- Hijazi Arabic: ديمن m (dēman)
- Bengali: রুইতন (bn) (ruiton)
- Bulgarian: кари pl (kari)
- Burmese: ထောင့် (my) (htaung.), ချွန်း (my) (hkywan:)
- Catalan: diamants (ca) m pl
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 方塊/方块 (zh) (fāngkuài)
- Czech: káry (cs) f pl
- Danish: ruder c
- Dutch: ruiten (nl) m or f, koeken (nl) m or f (Belgium)
- Esperanto: karoo, rombo
- Estonian: ruutu (et)
- Finnish: ruutu (fi)
- French: carreau (fr) m
- Galician: diamantes m pl
- German: Karo (de) n
- Greek: καρό (el) (karó)
- Hausa: zî m
- Hebrew: יהלום (he) m (yahalom)
- Hindi: ईंट (hi) f (ī̃ṭ)
- Hungarian: káró (hu)
- Ingrian: ruuto
- Interlingua: quadro
- Italian: quadri (it) m pl
- Japanese: ダイヤ (ja) (daiya)
- Khmer: ការូ (kaaruu)
- Latin: quadra n pl
- Latvian: kāravs (lv)
- Lithuanian: please add this translation if you can
- Luxembourgish: Rauten pl
- Macedonian: баклава (mk) f (baklava), каро́ n (karó)
- Malay: ciduk, daiman, retin
- Maltese: dinari
- Mongolian: дөрвөлжин (mn) (dörvölžin)
- Navajo: óola
- Ojibwe: ayashawens, gakak, gaanoo
- Polish: karo (pl) n
- Portuguese: ouros (pt) m pl
- Romanian: romb (ro) n, caro (ro) n
- Russian: бу́бны (ru) f pl (búbny), бу́бна (ru) f (búbna)
- Slovak: please add this translation if you can
- Spanish: diamantes (es) m pl
- Swahili: uru
- Swedish: ruter (sv) n
- Tagalog: oros
- Turkish: karo (tr)
- Turkmen: kerpiçhal
- Vietnamese: rô (vi)
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diamonds
- third-person singular simple present indicative of diamond
- “diamond n.”, in Green’s Dictionary of Slang, Jonathon Green, 2016–present
- The template Template:R:Partridge New does not use the parameter(s):
head=diamonds
Please see Module:checkparams for help with this warning.Eric Partridge (2005) “diamonds”, in Tom Dalzell and Terry Victor, editors, The New Partridge Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English, volume 1 (A–I), London, New York, N.Y.: Routledge, →ISBN, page 580.