Definitions Related words Mentions Colors (New!)
Color:
Pale Coral


More info:
ColorHexa


Colors with the same hue:
Sooty Black
Eclipse
Merlot
Cordovan
Rich carmine
Carbon
English red
Brick red
Amaranth
Grapefruit
Old rose
Rosy
Tuscany
Tulip
Baby pink
Light Rose
Light red
Petal
Tooth
Similar colors:
Light red
Baby pink
Soft Rose
Light Rose
Pale pink
Petal
Gentle Rose
Pale chestnut
Mellow Gold
Pastel pink
Melon
Pink
Faint Blush
Light Pink
Tuscany
Tooth
Gentle Pink
Soft Pink
Rosy
Taffy
Faded Rose
Delicate Coral
Old rose
Soft Peach
Puce
Burnished brown
Hemp
Cinereous
Patchouli
Turkish rose
Words evoked by this color:
millennial,  millennials,  millie,  popularized,  trend,  heartwarming,  rosenblatt,  rosenberg,  antoinette,  gushy,  giggled,  teased,  chicle,  lollygag,  perky,  kidding,  giddy,  tickling,  giggle,  giggling,  playfully,  silly,  humorously,  comical,  laughable,  humorous,  bub,  boop,  puerile,  chubby,  squishy,  teeny,  squish,  ping,  inflated,  chitchat,  teasing,  flippant,  squealing,  bop,  chew,  squeak,  jiggle,  lick,  licking,  licked,  yummy,  undressed,  undressing,  fingertip
Literary analysis:
In literature, pale coral is used not merely as a reference to an object but as a delicate hue that enriches the imagery and emotional tone of a passage. For instance, in one example, the color is invoked to describe lips—a "pale coral-pink" shade that conveys softness and vulnerability [1]. In another, pale coral hues color the buds of rose-briars set against a wintry landscape, lending an ethereal and almost otherworldly quality to nature’s details [2]. Overall, this color serves to subtly infuse scenes with warmth and a gentle, poetic quality, inviting readers to experience moments of nuanced beauty.
  1. Her lips, a pale coral-pink, were parted, showing two tiny teeth.
    — from Sussex Gorse: The Story of a Fight by Sheila Kaye-Smith
  2. The long rose-briars, set with pale coral buds, looked elvish against the wintry scene.
    — from Gone to Earth by Mary Gladys Meredith Webb

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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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