Carbon's eastern neighbor on the table, nitrogen, dresses up diamonds in pinks, yellows, oranges, and brownish tints known romantically as 'champagne.'
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Diamonds have an image of purity and light. They are given as a pledge of love and worn as a symbol of commitment.
I grew up in a home where diamonds were the subject.
I've always liked sparkling wine. Rose, too.
On a submicro scale, pure diamond is billions of billions of carbon atoms bonded to one another. If you shrunk yourself down and stood inside the diamond, you'd see nothing but carbon in a perfect pattern in every direction.
I have to report to those of you who think diamonds make a difference that I cannot tell what it is. Seriously, as you all know, they make no difference at all. They just make the flute look a little more special.
We're seeing diamonds coming back into favor.
Bright reds - scarlet, pillar-box red, crimson or cherry - are very cheerful and youthful. There is certainly a red for everyone.
Let us not be too particular; it is better to have old secondhand diamonds than none at all.
Silver and ermine and red faces full of port wine.
I keep coming back to you in my head, but you couldn't know that, and I have no carbons.