Diamond

//ˈdaɪ.ə.mənd//

Word Type

Noun
Proper Noun
Adjective
Verb

The word "diamond" can be used as noun, proper noun, adjective and verb.

Word Relationships

Opposites (Antonyms)

Created By

Derived Terms

Alençon diamond American diamond Bristol diamond Cornish diamond Diamond Creek Diamond Head Diamond Lake Diamond Valley Diamond-Blackfan anemia Irish diamond Killiecrankie diamond Mach diamond Matura diamond Shwachman-Diamond syndrome accent diamond adamantine baseball diamond black diamond blood diamond blue diamond impatiens chocolate diamond conflict diamond deadly diamond of death diamond accent diamond anniversary diamond anvil cell diamond ball diamond beetle diamond bird diamond bracket diamond carry diamond cross diamond crossing diamond crossover diamond cut diamond diamond cutter diamond dove diamond duck diamond dust diamond firetail diamond frame diamond geezer diamond graph diamond grass diamond hands diamond in the rough diamond jubilee diamond junction diamond lane diamond marimba diamond mortar diamond mullet diamond number diamond open access diamond paste diamond planet diamond plate diamond poem diamond problem diamond python diamond ring effect diamond saw diamond sturgeon diamond turbot diamond turning diamond twill diamond wedding diamond wheel diamond willow diamond-shaped diamond-square algorithm diamond-water paradox diamondback diamondback moth diamondiferous diamondize diamondless diamondlike diamondoid diamonds are a girl's best friend diamonds are forever diamondwise double black diamond dreaded diamond fire diamond histodiamond hyperdiamond industrial diamond nanodiamond nondiamond pink diamond poor man's diamond pressure makes diamonds rose diamond rough diamond shock diamond table diamond table-diamond thrust diamond tidal diamond

Made Of

Receives Action

Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.