amber nectar
Beer.
Fortunately, once in the beergarden with the good Doctor and a cold and frothy schooner of the amber nectar, everything fell into place.
noun
Ambergris, the waxy product of the sperm whale.
Ambre is hote and drye […] Some say that it is the sparme of a whale.
As for Amber Grice, or Amber Cane, which ist most sweet myngled with other sweete thynges: some say it commeth from the rocks of the Sea. […] Some say it is gotten by a fish called Azelum, which feedeth upon Amber Grece, and dyeth, which is taken by cunnyng fishers and the belly opened, and this precious Amber found in hym.
Ambergris, the waxy product of the sperm whale.
The leaves of the foreſt were loaded with manna, pure amber dropped from every bough, honey diſtilled from the rifted rock, and the humming bee, drunk with joy, ſtrayed from flower to flower, forgetful of his burſting cells.
A hard, generally yellow to brown translucent or transparent fossil resin from extinct coniferous trees of the pine genus, used for jewellery, decoration and later dissolved as a binder in varnishes. One variety, blue amber, appears blue ra
With scarfs and fans and double change of bravery, With amber bracelets, beads, and all this knavery.
Slanders, sir: for the satirical rogue says here that old men have grey beards, that their faces are wrinkled, their eyes purging thick amber and plum-tree gum and that they have a plentiful lack of wit.
A yellow-orange colour.
And I looked, and, behold, a whirlwind came out of the north, a great cloud, and a fire infolding itself, and a brightness was about it, and out of the midst thereof as the colour of amber, out of the midst of the fire.
The intermediate light in a set of three traffic lights, which when illuminated indicates that drivers should stop when safe to do so. See also yellow light.
While earlier controllers provided concurrent ambers, present practice is to indicate a minimum intergreen period of 4 s.
Also flashing ambers are not operational at this type of crossing.
adj
Of a brownish yellow colour, like that of most amber.
They all moved safely through the first green and then the second, but when the third light turned amber Jack's taxi was the last to cross the intersection.
Ahead, a cool breeze swept the pale morning sun across a grassy meadow turned amber by morning's frost.
verb
To perfume or flavour with ambergris.
ambered wine, an ambered room
To preserve in amber.
an ambered fly
To cause to take on the yellow colour of amber.
For purple mountains majesty; for amber waves of grain.
Home to the mosaic of coloured-lit windows in the black and white houses, the fake gas lamps ambering the cobbles, sometimes the scent of applewood smoke.
To take on the yellow colour of amber.
Westward along Lancaster Avenue, among the stone walls and broad driveways of imposing old houses—their lawns dappled with the shade of ambering maples and dusty, bark-peeled sycamores—
[T]hough many of the pirates protested against these energetic activities[,] he was only pleasantly tired when the lowering, ambering sun began to bounce needles of gold glare off the waves ahead;