Cochineal
Sponsored by PipCame first in group 311 in round 1 with 404 votesbeat Obstinate on 298 votesbeat Toady on 183 votesbeat Quarter on 63 votes
Came third in group 78 in round 2 with 117 votesbeaten by Piffle on 405 votesbeaten by Dudgeon on 155 votesbeat Valedictory on 88 votes
English[edit]
Alternative forms[edit]
Etymology[edit]
Borrowed from French cochenille,[1] itself probably from Spanish cochinilla, or from Ancient Greek κόκκινος (kókkinos, “red tint”), from κόκκος (kókkos), from Latin coccus (“berry or grain”)[2] (term applied to Kermes quercus, a scale insect used in the production of red dye).
Pronunciation[edit]
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˌkɒtʃɪˈniː(ə)l/
Audio (Southern England) (file) - (General American) IPA(key): /ˌkɑt͡ʃɪˈni(ə)l/
- Hyphenation: coch‧i‧neal
Noun[edit]
cochineal (countable and uncountable, plural cochineals)
- (entomology) A species of insect (Dactylopius coccus).
- A vivid red dye made from the bodies of cochineal insects.
- Synonym: E120
- The vivid red color of this dye.
- 2000, Mark Z. Danielewski, House of Leaves, page 26:
- I just keep staring at all the ink we have, that wild variety of color, everything from rootbeer, midnight blue and cochineal to mauve, light doe, lilac, south sea green, maize, even pelican black, all lined up in these plastic caps, […]
- cochineal:
Derived terms[edit]
Translations[edit]
insect
|
dye
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Adjective[edit]
cochineal (not comparable)
- Possessing a vivid red color, as produced from dying with cochineal.
- 1997, The Ethiopian Borderlands. Richard Pankhurst. 1997.
- The principal imports arriving by sea, then as previously, were textiles, among them coarse cotton cloth, known as Surat, the Indian port from which they were shipped, as well as blue cotton cloth and cochineal cloth called kemis
- 1927, Breeze Hill News[1]:
- Batavus, of somewhat the same shade, was slightly taller, and perhaps with a little more cochineal color.
- 1997, The Ethiopian Borderlands. Richard Pankhurst. 1997.
References[edit]
- ^ Douglas Harper (2001–2024) “cochineal”, in Online Etymology Dictionary.
- ^ Notes and Queries: Series 2, Volume 9, p. 477. William Thoms (ed.) Oxford University Press 1860
Further reading[edit]
- cochineal on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- Dactylopius coccus on Wikispecies.Wikispecies