viridian

English

Etymology

From Latin viridis, from the verb vireo (to be verdant, to sprout).

Noun

viridian (countable and uncountable, plural viridians)

  1. A bluish-green pigment made from a form of chromic oxide.
    • 1890, Arthur Herbert Church, The Chemistry of Paints and Painting, London: Seeley & Co., 3rd edition, 1901, Chapter 16, p. 195,
      It would be difficult to exaggerate the value of this addition to the artist’s palette. The colour of viridian is a very deep bluish green of great purity and transparency. It furnishes, with aureolin on the one hand and with ultramarine on the other, an immense number of beautiful hues, adapted to represent the colours of vegetation and of water.
  2. (color) A bluish-green color.
    viridian colour:  

Adjective

viridian (comparative more viridian, superlative most viridian)

  1. (colour) Of a bluish green colour.
    • 1928, Humbert Wolfe, “Spring” in This Blind Rose, London: Victor Gollancz, p. 47,
      spring sweeps the wood’s cathedral nave
      with the green fury of a wave,
      till oak and elm and beech and ash
      in one viridian comber crash,
      while at their feet red vetches shine,
      sharp, and cold, and coralline.
    • 1937, Robert Byron, The Road to Oxiana, “Bamian,”
      We walked out on to a balcony, looking down on the bright green fields, the grey-blue river lined with viridian poplars, and the red earth paths where the peasants were driving their animals []

See also

  • Appendix:Colors
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