A trinket is a small pretty thing of small value. a piece of jewelry or a ornament something shiny and new.
A bauble is a showy little trinket,decoration or toy of little value. In medieval times a bauble was the baton used as an emblem by jesters.
When restoring a vehicle that originally had a hood ornament, adding the hood ornament will increase its value. However, if no hood ornament was originally on the vehicle, then adding one typically will not increase the car's value.
Hallmark ornament values differ greatly, depending on the age of the ornament, the original box condition (including the price tab on the side of the box), and how rare the ornament is. I've seen Hallmark ornaments sell for as little as $0.99 for very common ornaments, but as much as $600.00 for the #1 Frosty Friends ornament. There are ornaments even more rare than the #1 Frosty Friend, but those are very few in number and VERY rare. Most Hallmark ornaments seem to average around $10 to $30 in value. If you are looking for the specific value of a particular Hallmark ornament,
The ornament of a house is the friends who frequent it, emphasizing the idea that true value lies in the relationships and connections we have with others.
Paltriness is the state or characteristic of being paltry - trashy, trivial, or of little value.
Their is a great site to go that will tell you what the value of what your ornaments are. It is www.bizrate.com/...collectibles-books/ornament-value-guide.
Very little. The value of the gold is so small as to make it valueless.
Give me the current value of the Danbury Mint 1993 Gold Christmas Ornament Collection.
On amazon.com they vary from 3 to thirty dollars (not including shipping)
Not too much - probably under $15 per ornament.
An appoggiatura is a type of musical ornament. It is like a 'leaning note' and is written as a grace note printed in small character, without a line through the stem, prefixed to a principal note and generally takes about half the time value of this note.It is not to be confused with an acciaccatura, sometimes called a 'crushed note' which takes up very little time value of the principal note it is prefixed to. You can tell the difference between them as an acciaccatura has a line through the stem but is also written in small print as a grace note.