Definitions Related words Mentions Colors (New!)
Color:
Slate blue


More info:
Wikipedia, ColorHexa


Colors with the same hue:
Smoky
Ocean Blue
Iris
Pale lavender
Similar colors:
Iris
Ocean Blue
New Car
Deep Purple
Amethyst
Absolute Zero
Sapphire
Royal purple
Grape
Cobalt blue
Egyptian blue
Persian blue
Brilliant Blue
Azure
Blueberry
Purpureus
Smalt 
Very light blue
Denim
Lavender 
Dusk
Eminence
True blue
Bright Purple
Indigo
Ultraviolet
Pale violet
Sparkling Sapphire
Patriarch
Purple 
Words evoked by this color:
fiord,  acai,  indulging,  reverend,  pompadour,  queene,  majesty,  theological,  thespian,  hapsburg,  dowager,  empress,  matriarch,  rarity,  ist,  amix,  geode,  amy,  amite,  amelia,  mozart,  amended,  rare,  amery,  rarer,  mythic,  jolla,  kahuna,  adapt,  seaward,  swell,  mombasa,  valparaiso,  californian,  adaptive,  vancouver,  rarely,  inviolable,  reverence,  dignity,  royal,  roy,  parlement,  hague,  kauffman,  secretariat,  constable,  confident,  respect,  duke
Literary analysis:
In literature, the color slate blue is often deployed to evoke a cool, enigmatic, and sometimes melancholic atmosphere. It appears in descriptions of human features—such as in portrayals where eyes are noted as "slate blue" to suggest depth or mystery [1, 2, 3]—and extends to the natural world, where landscapes and seascapes adopt a dark, somber hue, as seen in the depiction of a brooding ocean or an eastern horizon rapidly darkening into slate blue [4, 5, 6]. Slate blue is also used to characterize animals and objects, from the soft plumage of a bird shading into blue-black [7] to the painted serenity of a room trimmed in cream [8]. Even in a catalog of hues or during descriptions of seasonal metamorphoses—as a larva shifting from yellowish-brown to slate blue when engorged—the color offers an evocative, versatile quality that enriches the literary tapestry [9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14].
  1. Magnificent eyes—slate blue, with thick, velvety black lashes.
    — from The Drums of Jeopardy by Harold MacGrath
  2. “Because your eyes are slate blue like your mother's.
    — from The Drums of Jeopardy by Harold MacGrath
  3. I noticed for the first time that his eyes were slate blue, with funny birds' foot wrinkles at the corners.
    — from Parnassus on Wheels by Christopher Morley
  4. The ocean was a dark, slate blue.
    — from Creatures of the Abyss by Murray Leinster
  5. Carroll saw the lake, slate blue and angry, with white-capped billows to the limit of vision.
    — from The Riverman by Stewart Edward White
  6. Above it pulsed and banded a tumult of smoke gray clouds; the eastern horizon was a slate blue, rapidly darkening.
    — from Mountain: A Novel by Clement Wood
  7. It is a slate blue bird shading into blue-black on the neck and back.
    — from A Critique of the Theory of Evolution by Thomas Hunt Morgan
  8. The room is sixteen by eighteen feet, painted a light slate blue with white or cream trim.
    — from Seaport in Virginia George Washington's Alexandria by Gay Montague Moore
  9. The nymph when unengorged reddish-brown, when gorged dark bluish-grey; the larva is yellowish-brown when unengorged, slate blue when engorged.
    — from The Animal Parasites of Man by Fred. V. (Frederick Vincent) Theobald
  10. Its general colour is black, or slate blue, though a few of the small feathers round the neck, and on part of the body, are white.
    — from Bertha's Visit to Her Uncle in England; vol. 3 [of 3] by Mrs. (Jane Haldimand) Marcet
  11. The adult male, which is much smaller than the female, is slate blue on the upper parts, with rufous on the cheeks and ear coverts.
    — from Birds of Britain by J. Lewis (John Lewis) Bonhote
  12. Coloration: face yellow with blue bands encircling the eyes; hood red on top, yellow underneath; belly yellow; body a dirty slate blue; legs same.
    — from Tarzan the Terrible by Edgar Rice Burroughs
  13. We find, for instance, some forms of Florentine decoration, full of yellow, red-yellow, blue-greens and light slate blues.
    — from Color Value by C. R. (Chandler Robbins) Clifford
  14. Three more dogs, one white, one slate blue and one pink, hurried up and tried to climb aboard.
    — from Time In the Round by Fritz Leiber

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This tab, the new OneLook "color thesaurus", is a work in progress. It draws from a data set of more than 2000 color names gathered from sources around the Web, and an analysis of how they are referenced in English texts. Some words, like "peach", function as both a color name and an object; when you do a search for words like these, you will see both of the above sections.



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