Definitions Related words Phrases Mentions History Colors (New!)
Color:
Xanthic


More info:
Wikipedia, ColorHexa


Colors with the same hue:
Olive
Sycamore
Titanium
Smudge
Bile
Peridot
Sulfur
Dark khaki
Gentle Sage
Lemon
Yellow
Sage
Sunny Yellow
Straw
Daffodil
Sallow
Dun
Alabaster
Similar colors:
Aureolin
Peridot
Dazzling Yellow
Sunny Yellow
Middle yellow
Cadmium yellow
Lemon
Daffodil
Sulfur
Dandelion
Vivid yellow
Yellow
Golden yellow
Bitter lemon
Bile
Sickly Yellow
Pear
Bold Yellow
Citrine
Lime 
Jonquil
Sunflower
Maize
Golden poppy
Buttercup
Honey
Spring bud
Sunglow
Amber
Mango
Words evoked by this color:
cadiz,  lemon,  leman,  lemma,  yancey,  lavour,  yellow,  shandy,  flavin,  lumis,  annoyance,  citric,  citrus,  citrate,  squeeze,  squeezed,  zest,  lem,  pucker,  lum,  lenny,  blare,  blinding,  titi,  whin,  cornmeal,  goldenrod,  acacia,  nourishment,  loquat,  pone,  cheddar,  gouda,  avens,  braunschweig,  burma,  jaunty,  disposition,  vincent,  comb,  baklava,  blond,  amber,  blonde,  combing,  ambrosia,  noonday,  rays,  corona,  surya
Literary analysis:
The term "xanthic" is often used to evoke vivid hues associated with yellow and its variants in literary contexts. For example, in one passage, a "brave xanthic bloom" paints an image of a boldly colored flower ([1]). The word is also employed to classify color series, as seen when authors distinguish between a yellow-inclusive "Xanthic" group and others, such as the "Cyanic" series ([2], [3]). In botanical descriptions, "xanthic" is used to emphasize the presence of yellow in flora ([4]). Additionally, the color descriptor extends to nuanced applications, describing tints from an "intense gamboge" devoid of orange shades to deep orange with a reddish tinge ([5], [6]). Overall, "xanthic" serves as a versatile literary device, highlighting the rich, varied spectrum of yellow and its related tones.
  1. Brave xanthic bloom!
    — from The Chautauquan, Vol. 03, July 1883 by Chautauqua Institution
  2. The first, which included the yellow, was called the Xanthic ; the second, which omitted the yellow, the Cyanic .
    — from Eye Spy: Afield with Nature Among Flowers and Animate Things by W. Hamilton (William Hamilton) Gibson
  3. The type of the cyanic series is blue, and that of the xanthic series yellow.
    — from Appletons' Popular Science Monthly, July 1899 Volume LV, No. 3, July 1899 by Various
  4. Xanthic, flowers including yellow in their color, 45 .
    — from Eye Spy: Afield with Nature Among Flowers and Animate Things by W. Hamilton (William Hamilton) Gibson
  5. Xanthic tint a very intense gamboge, without any shade of orange.
    — from A History of North American Birds; Land Birds; Vol. 2 of 3 by Robert Ridgway
  6. Xanthic tints deep orange, with a reddish tinge on the breast.
    — from A History of North American Birds; Land Birds; Vol. 2 of 3 by Robert Ridgway

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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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