Definition of "marmoreal"
marmoreal
adjective
comparative more marmoreal, superlative most marmoreal
Resembling marble or a marble statue; cold, smooth, white, etc.; marblelike.
Quotations
How many a night serene, shall I behold / Those warm attractive orbits, close inshrined / In ether, over which Love's column rose / Marmoreal, trophied round with golden hair.
1798 July, Walter Savage Landor, “Book IV”, in Gebir; a Poem: […], 2nd edition, Oxford, Oxforshire: […] Slatter and Munday; and sold by R. S. Kirby, […], published 1803, page 65
[T]he green / And glancing shadows of the sea did play / O'er its marmoreal depth: […]
1817 December (indicated as 1818), Percy B[ysshe] Shelley, “Canto First”, in Laon and Cythna; or, The Revolution of the Golden City: A Vision of the Nineteenth Century. […], London: […] [F]or Sherwood, Neely, & Jones, […]; and C[harles] and J[ames] Ollier, […]; by B. M‘Millan, […], stanza XX, page 11
Each feminine delight of florid lip, / Eyes brimming o'er and brow bowed down with love, / Marmoreal neck and bosom uberous,— […]
1869, Robert Browning, “IX. Juris Doctor Johannes-Baptista Bottinius.”, in The Ring and the Book. […], volume III, London: Smith, Elder and Co., pages 177–178, lines 51–53
The marmoreal whiteness of her perfect neck and firm, well-rounded arms was emphasized by a sharp contrast. Of color there was none, save for the slight flush of health in her cheeks and the rich, red line of her strong, sensitive mouth.
1901 December, Edward S[ims] Van Zile, “The Chopin Society”, in Perkins, the Fakeer: A Travesty on Reincarnation […], New York, N.Y., London: The Smart Set Publishing Co., published April 1903, page 246
[I]f now the soldier's fingertips, the pads, seemingly endowed with a sudden clairvoyance, could sense through those different stuffs the hems of subterranean garments and even the very minute roughness of skin, pores and moles—if, as I said, his fingertips arrived at this, perhaps her flesh, marmoreal and lazy, was hardly aware that these were, in fact, fingertips, and not for example, nails or knuckles.
1984, Italo Calvino, “[Stories of Love and Loneliness] The Adventure of a Soldier”, in William Weaver, transl., Difficult Loves (A Helen and Kurt Wolff Book), San Diego, Calif., New York, N.Y.: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, page 188
(obsolete) Made out of marble.
Quotations
But each night as he stood on that high marble terrace with the curious urns and carven rail and looked off over that hushed sunset of beauty and unearthly immanance he felt the bondage of dream's tyrannous gods; for in no wise could he leave that lofty spot, or descend the wide marmoreal flights flung endlessly down to where those streets of elder witchery lay outspread and beckoning.
c. 1926 – 1927 (date written), H[oward] P[hillips] Lovecraft, “The Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath”, in August Derleth, Donald Wandrei, compilers, Beyond the Wall of Sleep, Sauk City, Wis.: Arkham House, published 1943; republished in August Derleth, editor, The Arkham Sampler, volume 1, number 1, Sauk City, Wis.: Arkham House, winter 1948, part I, page 50