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单词 carmine
释义

Definition of carmine in English:

carmine

noun ˈkɑːmɪnˈkɑːmʌɪnˈkɑrmaɪn
mass noun
  • 1A vivid crimson colour.

    as modifier carmine roses
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The flowers were crimson, carmine, vermillion.
    • In the pictures of girls - Miss Catherine Tatton is an extreme example - black and carmine are applied so crisply that you would, today, think of mascara and lipstick.
    • Colonies of carmine bee eaters nested in holes in the sand banks.
    • Caleb woke up with a great big yawn, his carmine tongue flicking over the roof of his mouth.
    • However, the most picturesque of all bee-eaters in the world is the crimson plumaged carmine bee-eater, which I had seen once - in a bare, dark thorny tree in Masai Mara, Kenya.
    • When the petals fall, the 2-inch carmine fruit develops, revealing scarlet seeds.
    • Everyone has a different idea of what is meant by colours such as apricot, cherry, peach, cerise or carmine.
    • Two long wagons appeared in the square, ridden by the priests in their flowing carmine robes.
    • Their value as ornamental plants is contained in their intricately patterned and colourful foliage which ranges from jade green with cyclamen veins; chartreuse with carmine veins; and Sherwood green with silver veins.
    • This spiraea is common and sometimes derided because of this, but it is an easy-to-grow deciduous shrub with attractive reddish young leaves that mature to dark green and lovely deep carmine pink flowers from mid to late summer.
    • There are also other colors such as carmine red, purple with white eyes, and Cambridge blue.
    • The flames were as expected - carmine, saffron, vermilion.
    • Its leaves are sometimes tinged with pink or cream and the large, flat, long lasting flowerheads are carmine pink and carried from July to September.
    • They are small in scale and feature extensive use of gold and brilliant, rich and sparkling colors like ultramarine, Prussian blue, indigo, violet, purple, carmine and tangerine.
    • She closed the folder and licked her carmine lips in a rare gesture of apprehension.
    • His sensuous mouth is constrained, his carmine lips almost quiver.
    • A pungent smell but they [lychees] taste sweeter than you think, translucent like jelly but firmer, and peeling the dusky carmine skin of a lychee is a most satisfactory business.
    • Instead of being the customary deep red, it was an odd carmine colour.
    • Birdlife is rich with African skimmers, fish eagles, many types of heron and colonies of carmine bee-eaters.
    • If the set is entirely monochromatic the costumes use vivid colour - luscious carmine reds, particularly for the lovers.
    Synonyms
    scarlet, vermilion, ruby, ruby-red, ruby-coloured, cherry, cherry-red, cerise, cardinal, carmine, wine, wine-red, wine-coloured, claret, claret-red, claret-coloured, blood-red
    1. 1.1 A vivid crimson pigment made from cochineal.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Peru produces 80 percent of it as raw insect and only 18 percent in the form of carmine.
      • Also seek out natural sugar substitutes like stevia and natural food colors like annatto, carmine, carotene, and turmeric.
      • The customer relations representative assured us that carmine and cochineal are natural colors, and correctly so.
      • It produces the colorant cochineal, otherwise known as carmine or E120.
      • The carmine is used in an aqueous solution with potassium carbonate and potassium chloride. Glycogen stains bright red.

Origin

Early 18th century: from French carmin, based on Arabic qirmiz (see kermes). Compare with crimson.

  • vermilion from Middle English:

    The name for this brilliant red colour and pigment goes back to Latin vermis ‘a worm’, source also of vermin (Middle English), and its variant varmint (mid 16th century). The reason for the unlikely connection probably lies in the red colours crimson and carmine (early 18th century), which were originally extracted from the body of the kermes insect. People mistakenly thought that vermilion was also derived from an insect or worm, although its main early source was in fact cinnabar, a bright red mineral.

 
 

Definition of carmine in US English:

carmine

nounˈkärmīnˈkɑrmaɪn
  • 1A vivid crimson color.

    as modifier carmine roses
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Colonies of carmine bee eaters nested in holes in the sand banks.
    • The flames were as expected - carmine, saffron, vermilion.
    • Everyone has a different idea of what is meant by colours such as apricot, cherry, peach, cerise or carmine.
    • Instead of being the customary deep red, it was an odd carmine colour.
    • His sensuous mouth is constrained, his carmine lips almost quiver.
    • There are also other colors such as carmine red, purple with white eyes, and Cambridge blue.
    • When the petals fall, the 2-inch carmine fruit develops, revealing scarlet seeds.
    • Caleb woke up with a great big yawn, his carmine tongue flicking over the roof of his mouth.
    • The flowers were crimson, carmine, vermillion.
    • A pungent smell but they [lychees] taste sweeter than you think, translucent like jelly but firmer, and peeling the dusky carmine skin of a lychee is a most satisfactory business.
    • She closed the folder and licked her carmine lips in a rare gesture of apprehension.
    • Their value as ornamental plants is contained in their intricately patterned and colourful foliage which ranges from jade green with cyclamen veins; chartreuse with carmine veins; and Sherwood green with silver veins.
    • This spiraea is common and sometimes derided because of this, but it is an easy-to-grow deciduous shrub with attractive reddish young leaves that mature to dark green and lovely deep carmine pink flowers from mid to late summer.
    • However, the most picturesque of all bee-eaters in the world is the crimson plumaged carmine bee-eater, which I had seen once - in a bare, dark thorny tree in Masai Mara, Kenya.
    • They are small in scale and feature extensive use of gold and brilliant, rich and sparkling colors like ultramarine, Prussian blue, indigo, violet, purple, carmine and tangerine.
    • If the set is entirely monochromatic the costumes use vivid colour - luscious carmine reds, particularly for the lovers.
    • Birdlife is rich with African skimmers, fish eagles, many types of heron and colonies of carmine bee-eaters.
    • Its leaves are sometimes tinged with pink or cream and the large, flat, long lasting flowerheads are carmine pink and carried from July to September.
    • Two long wagons appeared in the square, ridden by the priests in their flowing carmine robes.
    • In the pictures of girls - Miss Catherine Tatton is an extreme example - black and carmine are applied so crisply that you would, today, think of mascara and lipstick.
    Synonyms
    scarlet, vermilion, ruby, ruby-red, ruby-coloured, cherry, cherry-red, cerise, cardinal, carmine, wine, wine-red, wine-coloured, claret, claret-red, claret-coloured, blood-red
    1. 1.1 A vivid crimson pigment made from cochineal.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The carmine is used in an aqueous solution with potassium carbonate and potassium chloride. Glycogen stains bright red.
      • It produces the colorant cochineal, otherwise known as carmine or E120.
      • Also seek out natural sugar substitutes like stevia and natural food colors like annatto, carmine, carotene, and turmeric.
      • Peru produces 80 percent of it as raw insect and only 18 percent in the form of carmine.
      • The customer relations representative assured us that carmine and cochineal are natural colors, and correctly so.

Origin

Early 18th century: from French carmin, based on Arabic qirmiz (see kermes). Compare with crimson.

 
 
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更新时间:2024/12/23 13:24:56