ombre - ορισμός. Τι είναι το ombre
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Τι (ποιος) είναι ombre - ορισμός

CARD GAME
L'Hombre; L'hombre; L’Hombre; Voltarete; L'Ombre
  • Brøndum's Hotel]]'' by Swedish artist [[Anna Palm de Rosa]], circa 1885

Ombré         
  • ''Ombré'': black to blue
  • A cake with purple ''ombré'' frosting
  • A woman with ''ombré'' hair
GRADUAL BLENDING OF COLOR
Ombre (hairstyle); Ombre hair; Ombrée
Ombré (literally "shaded" in French) is the blending of one color hue to another, usually moving tints and shades from light to dark. It has become a popular feature for hair coloring, nail art, and even baking, in addition to its uses in home decorating and graphic design.
ombre         
['?mb?, '?mbre?]
¦ noun a trick-taking card game for three people using a pack of forty cards, popular in the 17th-18th centuries.
Origin
from Sp. hombre 'man', with ref. to one player seeking to win the pool.
ombre         
['?mbre?]
¦ adjective (of a fabric) having a design in which the colour is graduated from light to dark.
Origin
Fr., past participle of ombrer 'to shade'.

Βικιπαίδεια

Ombre

Ombre (from Spanish hombre 'man', pronounced "omber") or l'Hombre is a fast-moving seventeenth-century trick-taking card game for three players and "the most successful card game ever invented."

Its history began in Spain around the end of the 16th century as a four-person game. It is one of the earliest card games known in Europe and by far the most classic game of its type, directly ancestral to Euchre, Boston and Solo Whist. Despite its difficult rules, complicated point score and strange foreign terms, it swept Europe in the last quarter of the 17th century, becoming Lomber in Germany, Lumbur in Austria and Ombre (originally pronounced 'umber') in England, occupying a position of prestige similar to contract bridge today. Ombre eventually developed into a whole family of related games such as the four-hand Quadrille, three-hand Tritrille, five-hand Quintille and six-hand Sextille, as well as German Solo, Austrian Préférence and Swedish Vira, itself "one of the most complex card games ever devised." Other games borrowed features from Ombre such as bidding; for example, the gambling game of Bête, formerly known as Homme, and the tarot game of Taroc l'Hombre.

Παραδείγματα από το σώμα κειμένου για ombre
1. Other standouts included an ombre dress that went from a white neckline to a black hemline and a strapless appliqued jumpsuit with those genie bottoms.