Definitions Related words Mentions Colors (New!)
Color:
Solid pink


More info:
Wikipedia, ColorHexa


Colors with the same hue:
Puce red
Wine
Merlot
Red-violet 
Spanish carmine
Red rum
Bright maroon
Maroon 
Deep Taupe
Dingy Dungeon
Paradise pink
Infrared
Fiery rose
Pixel Pink
Hazy Mauve
Mellow Gold
Pale chestnut
Soft Rose
Similar colors:
Cordovan
Syrah
Port
Muted Red
English red
Red Velvet
Claret
Antique ruby
Garnet
Middle red purple
Catawba
Big dip o’ruby
Tuscan red
Canyon Red
Espresso
Words evoked by this color:
cordoba,  cordova,  homestead,  homemade,  boar,  firenze,  bole,  canter,  equestrian,  gelding,  gallop,  trotting,  equine,  cheval,  pheasant,  hickory,  chestnut,  roasted,  chesterton,  tannin,  hereford,  chen,  cognac,  merlot,  meritage,  tallahassee,  seminole,  maenad,  bacchanal,  nebulochaotic,  neb,  nestle,  starving,  bradbury,  apocrypha,  crumple,  hogarth,  creak,  treadle,  toiling,  damaged,  contorted,  sarcastically,  painstakingly,  travail,  sputtered,  fumbled,  pillaged,  hob,  wastrel
Literary analysis:
In literature, the term "solid pink" is employed to evoke a distinctive and vivid representation of color in natural elements, particularly blossoms. In one example, a contrast is drawn between blossoms that are uniformly "solid pink" against those with a mixed pink-and-white hue, highlighting the uniqueness of the described flowers [1]. Similarly, another text uses the term to emphasize the bold appearance of carnations, suggesting not only their color but also their striking individuality through the repetition of "solid pink" [2]. Together, these examples showcase how the phrase conveys a strong, unambiguous visual impression in botanical imagery.
  1. blossoms,—solid pink, not pink-and-white like ours at home.
    — from One Year Abroad by Blanche Willis Howard
  2. 'Twelve, Marty; twelve solid pink carnations.
    — from Atlantic Narratives: Modern Short Stories; Second Series by James Edmund Dunning



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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