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Color:
Soot


More info:
ColorHexa


Colors with the same hue:
Black
Pitch
Pitch Black
Soot Black
Deep Space Black
Phantom Black
Eerie black
Tar
Iron Black
Coal Black
Coal
Asphalt Gray
Jet
Hematite
Tungsten
Smalt 
Philippine blue
Royal azure
Egyptian blue
Faded Black
Nearby colors:
Davy's grey
Cinder Gray
Iron Gray
Charred Black
Granite gray
Dim gray
Dolphin
Smoky
Sonic silver
Zinc
Matte Black
Space Gray
Nocturne
Words evoked by this color:
wrought,  blacksmith,  andiron,  germanic,  iron,  farrier,  teutonic,  ferro,  ferrous,  ferromagnetic,  forge,  magnetism,  draftsman,  graphite,  hexagonal,  staub,  blackwood,  swarthy,  ebenezer,  nubian,  melanin,  exclusively,  umberto,  umbo,  eggplant,  moussaka,  aubergine,  waldorf,  foundry,  drawn,  sketchy,  carbonic,  sketched,  basalt,  basaltic,  rubbing,  scrawled,  blackened,  blacked,  soot,  blacken,  blacker,  sooty,  stoutly,  black,  offstage,  unrecognized,  unrecognizable,  blackish,  adamant
Literary analysis:
In literature, soot is often invoked as a striking shade of black that not only conveys physical darkness but also suggests mystery or a weathered quality. For example, it appears as a pigment alongside colors like vermilion and ocher in decorative rituals, emphasizing its role as a marker of rich, earthy hue ([1]). Writers also employ soot in vivid similes, comparing the blackness of venison and the legs of a red roan to soot, thereby amplifying its intense, inky character ([2], [3]). Additionally, authors sometimes attribute the very color of natural elements to soot—as in the case of snowdrops described as "soot-coloured"—to evoke an arresting, if somber, visual contrast with their surroundings ([4]). In these ways, the color "soot" emerges as a powerful literary device, symbolizing not just physical staining but deeper aesthetic and thematic layers.
  1. They lived in wigwams, wore Indian dress, decorated their long hair with eagle feathers, and made their faces hideous with vermilion, ocher, and soot.
    — from A School History of the United States by John Bach McMaster
  2. It consisted of lean beef, and venison as black as soot, with plenty of milk; but as for bread we had none of any description.
    — from The Three Perils of Man; or, War, Women, and Witchcraft, Vol. 2 (of 3) by James Hogg
  3. Red roan, with legs as black as soot.
    — from The Night Riders: A Romance of Early Montana by Ridgwell Cullum
  4. Naturally, bulbs were the most satisfactory things, and Crocus, Narcissus and Tulip were joyful, but soot-coloured Snowdrops were not inspiring.
    — from The Book of Town & Window Gardening by Frances A. Bardswell


Colors associated with the word:
Charcoal
Ebony
Onyx
Jet
Coal
Graphite
Smoke
Pewter
Gunmetal
Iron
Obsidian
Raven
Midnight
Ink
Cinder
Shadow
Pitch
Words with similar colors:
blacked,  blacken,  blacker,  black,  sooty,  blackened,  blackwood,  swarthy,  blackie,  stoutly,  blackish,  ebenezer,  back,  lack,  sable,  tarry,  niger,  sabled,  spade,  swarth


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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