The Latin word for jewel is "gemma."
Gemma
Gemma is the Latin word for "gemstone; jewel'.
The Latin word for 'gem' or 'jewel' is 'gemma'. The word 'jewelry' implies more than one gem or jewel. So the Latin equivalent is gemmae. The jeweller is 'qui gemmas vendit', 'qui gemmas sculpit', which means '[the one] who sells jewels, who cuts jewels'.
derives from the Latin 'jocus' which passed into old French as Joel and then into Middle English as Jewel. That is English spoken after the Norman conquest of 1066
The Latin word for 'gem' or 'jewel' is 'gemma'. The word 'jewelry' implies more than one gem or jewel. So the Latin equivalent is gemmae. The jeweller is 'qui gemmas vendit', 'qui gemmas sculpit', which means '[the one] who sells jewels, who cuts jewels'.
Pendant is from the Latin pendere ("hanging") and refers to a jewel, medal, or ornament hung around the neck on a necklace or chain.
No. The word Jewelry, or rather, the root jewel, comes from Old French jouel, which seems to relate to jocale, a Medieval Vulgar Latin word meaning "that which causes joy". Curiously, this puts it as a relative of joke, from the same origin. There are other theories about Jewel, but none touch on Jews and all trace back to different Latin words.
Jewel is her real name! Her full name is Jewel Kilcher.
I lost a jewel from my ring. You are a real jewel.
White Jewel
the green jewel is where the green jewel should be