0 a collection of gold, silver, jewellery, and valuable objects, especially in children's stories -- bogactwo, skarb
buried treasure
1 a very valuable object -- skarb
[ usually plural ] art treasures
2 If you treasure something, it is very important to you and gives you a lot of pleasure. -- pielęgnować
I shall treasure those memories of her.
All treasures have to be protected against burglars.
Who will want to look at a house denuded of all its treasures and, eventually, of its original owners?
They are called cultural treasures.
The actor image lives on in quotidian domestic contexts: on the mantelpiece, in albums or dusty shoeboxes, treasured in family papers or dispatched to junk shops.
Rural life was increasingly seen as something to be respected and recorded: to be understood, even treasured, in all its richness without being condemned or disparaged.
Natural life, cultural treasures, human bodies - all things are potential objects for consumption, dishes on a menu, otherness to be incorporated and spat out as sameness.
Although the terms are paradoxical, mistakes can be viewed as "gems" and "treasures" 80 because much can be learned from them for the betterment of future patients.
Costs are minimized in a communal system to preserve resources for other tasks within healthcare as well as to preserve resources for other socially treasured goods.