The Describer's Dictionary: A Treasury of Terms & Literary Quotations (16 page)

BOOK: The Describer's Dictionary: A Treasury of Terms & Literary Quotations
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clear light green
apple green
bluish green
aquamarine, turquoise, jade
yellowish green
Kelly green, leek green, hunter green, Nile green, absinthe
green, pistachio, verdigris, pea green, grass green, sea green,
verdant green, leaf green, malachite, moss green
dull yellow green
ocher green, olive
deep olive
loden green
grayish olive
olive drab
brilliant yellow green
chartreuse
dark green
forest green, evergreen, bottle green, marine green, peacock
green
grayish green
sage green
grayish yellow green
celadon green
blackish green
avocado
 
bright or vivid blue
ultramarine
pale blue
baby blue, sky blue, aquamarine, powder blue, Persian blue,
Wedgwood blue, sky blue, cerulean, azure, lapis lazuli
 
 
Light, line, and color as sensual pleasures, came later and were as crude as the rest. The New England light is glare, and the atmosphere harshens color. The boy was a full man before he ever knew what was meant by atmosphere; his idea of pleasure in light was the blaze of a New England sun. His idea of color was a peony, with the dew of early morning on its petals. The intense blue of the sea, as he saw it a mile or two away, from the Quincy hills; the cumuli in a June afternoon sky; the strong reds and greens and purples of colored prints and children’s picture-books, as the American colors then ran; these were ideals. The opposites or antipathies were the cold grays of November evenings, and the thick, muddy thaws of Boston winter.
HENRY ADAMS,
The Education of Henry Adams
 
 
The pink dusty road before us, the scrub and the dark pines, lay always between these depths of blue. The sea was calm; as one looked down, it drowned the eye like a second zenith, but bluer still; bluer than lapis, or sapphire, or whatever flower is bluest; and then again, in the dark clear shadows round the deep roots of the rocks, green and grape-purple, like the ring-dove’s sheen.
MARY RENAULT,
The King Must Die
 
 
The counterpane was of patchwork, full of odd little parti-colored squares and triangles; and this arm of his tattooed all over with an interminable Cretan labyrinth of a figure ... this same arm of his, I say, looked for all the world like a strip of that same patchwork quilt.
HERMAN MELVILLE,
Moby-Dick
 
greenish blue
turquoise, peacock blue, cobalt, Prussian blue, aqua, teal,
china blue, Nile blue
purplish blue
sapphire, moonstone blue, gentian, hyacinth, violet, marine
deep blue
royal blue
reddish blue
violet
grayish blue
Dresden blue, shadow blue, delft blue, robin’s egg, steel
blue, Copenhagen blue, electric blue (or electric green),
indigo
violet blue
periwinkle
 
light purple
orchid
pale purple
lavender
moderate purple
lilac, amethyst
reddish lavender
heliotrope
reddish purple
fuchsia, raspberry, plum
bluish purple
mauve
brownish purple
puce
dark purple
aubergine, eggplant
 
brown or brownish colors in general
earth tones
 
 
She drew a deep breath, the air had yet a hint about it of dawn, the dawn this morning at Acapulco—green and deep purple high above and gold scrolled back to reveal a river of lapis where the horn of Venus burned so fiercely she could imagine her dim shadow cast from its light on the air field, the vultures floating lazily up there above the brick-red horizon into whose peaceful foreboding the little plane of the Compania Mexicana de Aviacion had ascended, like a minute red demon, winged emissary of Lucifer, the windsock below streaming out its steadfast farewell.
MALCOLM LOWRY,
Under the Volcano
 
 
Like a woman’s wispy dress that has slipped off its hanger, the city shimmered and fell in fantastic folds, not held up by anything, a discarnate iridescence limply suspended in the azure autumnal air. Beyond the nacrine desert of the square, across which a car sped now and then with a new metropolitan trumpeting, great pink edifices loomed, and suddenly a sunbeam, a gleam of glass, would stab him painfully in the pupil.
VLADIMIR NABOKOV,
King, Queen, Knave
 
 
Off to my left, in that vast bowl of stillness that contains the meandering river, tens of square miles of tundra browns and sedge meadow greens seem to snap before me, as immediate as the pages of my notebook, because of unscattered light in the dustless air. The land seems guileless. Creatures down there take a few steps, then pause and gaze about. Two sandhill cranes stand still by the river. Three Peary caribou, slightly built and the silver color of the moon, browse a cutbank in that restive way of deer. Tundra melt ponds, their bright dark blue waters oblique to the sun, stand out boldly in the plain. In the center of the large ponds, beneath the surface of the water, gleam cores of aquamarine ice, like the constricted heart of winter.
BARRY LOPEZ,
Arctic Dreams
 
bright or vivid brown
café au lait
light or yellowish brown
tan, khaki, beige, fawn, caramel, sienna (raw sienna), fox,
bistre, camel, ecru
golden brown
butterscotch
yellowish brown
ginger
reddish brown
mahogany, umber, chestnut, bay, cinnamon, henna, russet,
copper, sienna (burnt sienna), walnut, oxblood, roan,
rosewood
moderate brown
auburn, coffee, cocoa, saddle tan, saddle brown
grayish brown
nutmeg, sepia
metallic or greenish brown
bronze
mottled brown and yellow
tortoiseshell
dark brown
chocolate, nut brown
 
pale gray
ash gray
moderate gray
platinum
bluish gray
smoke, battleship gray, steel gray, slate, Wedgwood blue,
pearl
purplish gray
gunmetal gray, dove, zinc
brownish gray
smoke, mouse gray, taupe, fuscous, dun
 
 
If they left behind the light-streak traces they do on time-exposed film, you would see the varicolored rings stacked one atop another, parallel to the horizon, shrinking in diameter, until the last ring, less than 2° across and traced by Polaris, circled the dark spot of empty space that lies over the North Pole.
BARRY LOPEZ,
Arctic Dreams
 
 
The one had leaves of dark green that beneath were as shining silver, and from each of his countless flowers a dew of silver light was ever falling, and the earth beneath was dappled with the shadows of his fluttering leaves. The other bore leaves of a young green like the new-opened beech; their edges were of glittering gold. Flowers swung upon her branches in clusters of yellow flame, formed each to a glowing horn that spilled a golden rain upon the ground; and from the blossom of that tree there came forth warmth and a great light.
J . R . R . TOLKIEN,
The Silmarillion
 
 
Like a rope of jewels the gorge spread beneath him, purple, sapphire blue, yellow and pinkish white, a rich and variegated inlay of wooded land and disappearing, reappearing, ubiquitous water.
C . S . LEWIS,
Out of the Silent Planet
 
yellowish gray
sand
dark gray
field gray, charcoal gray
 
black
ebony, ebon, sable, jet, onyx, ink black, coal black,
anthracite
purplish black
sooty black
Buildings and Dwellings
 
And among the various communities of the colored poor, distributed over miles and miles of indistinguishable grid, in bungalows and tenements and the clapboard huts they call shotgun houses—you could shoot a bullet easy front to back—in all that formless mass of poor Miami, tight loyal communities cluster around their origins, their friends and their cultures.
JAN MORRIS,
Journeys
 
 
Daily, I looked at houses to rent—shotgun cottages by the rail yards, ski chalets with circular fireplaces, and a house that was built under a small hill, for energy reasons. Finally I found one I liked, a cedar A-frame cabin with a wood stove and a sleeping loft and a flower box with marigolds.
IAN FRAZIER,
Great Plains
 
 
But not even the soft wash of dusk could help the houses. Only dynamite would be of any use against the Mexican ranch houses, Samoan huts, Mediterranean villas, Egyptian and Japanese temples, Swiss chalets, Tudor cottages, and every possible combination of these styles that lined the slopes of the canyon.
NATHANAEL WEST,
The Day of the Locust
 
TYPES OF STRUCTURES
 
 
relatively large structure
edifice, building, construction, erection, construct, fabric
structure in which to live
dwelling, home, house, habitation, abode, residence,
domicile, homestead, living quarters, lodgings, shelter,
dwelling house, billet, accommodations
structure in which people work
office building, commercial building, workplace, shop,
factory, store, plant, place of business
structure with individual living units
apartment house, tenement, residential building, high-rise,
cooperative apartment house, co-op building, co-op,
condominium, multiple-unit dwelling
 
structure where lodging and usually meals are provided
boardinghouse, guest house, pension, rooming house
overnight lodging place
hotel, motel, inn, hostelry, caravansary, lodge,
bed-and-breakfast
cheap lodging place
hostel, flophouse, dosshouse, fleabag, cold-water flat
 
large private dwelling
(
usually on spacious property
)
mansion, estate, château, country house, palace, manor,
manor house, family home, ancestral home, homestead,
hacienda
 
 
The house he lived in was a nondescript affair called the San Bernardino Arms. It was an oblong three stories high, the back and sides of which were of plain, unpainted stucco, broken by even rows of unadorned windows. The facade was the color of diluted mustard and its windows, all double, were framed by pink Moorish columns which supported turnip-shaped lintels.
NATHANAEL WEST,
The Day of the Locust
 
 
Yes, there it was, the Manderley I had expected, the Manderley of my picture post-card long ago. A thing of grace and beauty, exquisite and faultless, lovelier even than I had ever dreamed, built in its hollow of smooth grass-land and mossy lawns, the terraces sloping to the gardens, and the gardens to the sea. DAPHNE DU MAURIER
,
Rebecca
 
 
The sweet old farmhouse burrowed into the upward slope of the land so deeply that you could enter either its bottom or middle floor at ground level. Its window trim was delicate and the lights in its sash were a bubbly amethyst.
ERIC HODGINS, Mr.
Blandings
Builds His Dream House
 
 
Yetta Zimmerman’s house may have been the most open- heartedly monochromatic structure in Brooklyn, if not in all of New York. A large rambling wood and stucco house of the nondescript variety erected, I should imagine, sometime before or just after the First World War, it would have faded into the homely homogeneity of other large nondescript dwellings that bordered on Prospect Park had it not been for its striking—its overwhelming—pinkness. From its second- floor dormers and cupolas to the frames of its basement-level windows the house was unrelievedly pink.

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