MARBLES - significado y definición. Qué es MARBLES
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Qué (quién) es MARBLES - definición

SMALL, HARD SPHERICAL TOY
Aggie (marble); Marble collecting; Cat's eye marble; Marbles; Tom bowler; Keepsies; Marbles (game); Cat's eye (toy); Glass marble; Marble (Game); Marble (ball)
  • A clay marble, found in a field in the East Midlands
  • Some historic marbles
  • Roman children playing with nuts, child sarcophagi circa 270–300. Museum Pio Clementino, Vatican
  • ''Game of Marbles'', [[Karol D. Witkowski]]
  • A green glass marble in India
  • A very large American-made marble-making machine at [[Bovey Tracey]], Devon, England
  • An orange and white toothpaste marble
  • Glass marbles from Indonesia

marbles         
n.
1) to play marbles
2) a game of marbles
3) (misc.) (colloq.) to lose one's marbles ('to lose one's mind')
marbles         
<jargon> (From the mainstream "lost his marbles") The minimum needed to build your way further up some hierarchy of tools or abstractions. After a bad system crash, you need to determine if the machine has enough marbles to come up on its own, or enough marbles to allow a rebuild from backups, or if you need to rebuild from scratch. "This compiler doesn't even have enough marbles to compile hello, world." [Jargon File] (1998-05-21)
marbles         
[treated as sing.] a game in which marbles are rolled along the ground.

Wikipedia

Marble (toy)

A marble is a small spherical object often made from glass, clay, steel, plastic, or agate. They vary in size, and most commonly are about 13 mm (12 in) in diameter. These toys can be used for a variety of games called marbles, as well being placed in marble runs or races, or created as a form of art. They are often collected, both for nostalgia and for their aesthetic colors.

Sizes may range from less than 1 mm (130 in) to over 8 cm (3 in), while some art glass marbles for display purposes are over 30 cm (12 in) wide.

In the North of England the objects and the game are called "taws", with larger taws being called "bottle washers" after the use of a marble in Codd-neck bottles, which were often collected for play.

Ejemplos de uso de MARBLES
1. In every corridor groups of children play with marbles.
2. Beyond our Ken Is poor old Ken Livingstone losing his marbles?
3. Once the playground rang to the carefree sounds of children skipping, playing hopscotch and rolling marbles.
4. But besides, if the marbles stay here, so many more people will see them," she maintained.
5. Marbles "I pushed myself forward and because I was 6ft I could see Mosley.