roseate
English
Etymology
From Middle English roseat, from Anglo-Latin roseātus, equivalent to rose + -ate (“like, similar to”).
Pronunciation
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Adjective
roseate (comparative more roseate, superlative most roseate)
- (formal, chiefly zoology) Like the rose flower; pink; rosy.
- 1826, [Mary Shelley], chapter VII, in The Last Man. […], volume III, London: Henry Colburn, […], →OCLC:
- The countess took the roseate palm and snowy fingers of this lovely child.
- 1922, A. M. Chisholm, A Thousand a Plate
- Now the rum, as has been said, was criminally overproof, and they had had no intoxicants for a long time. And so a couple of stiff drinks produced a beautiful and generous expansion of soul. The mean cabin became larger, the fire warmer and more cheerful, and life generally of a more roseate hue. They began to feel the prodigal Thanksgiving spirit, and to regret their limited opportunities for satisfying it.
- Full of roses.
- 2018, Thom Nickels, Philadelphia Mansions: Stories and Characters behind the Walls:
- To fund the purchase, he had to sell a late Renoir, The Judgment of Paris, with its depiction of weighty ladies frolicking in a roseate garden.
- (figurative) Excessively optimistic.
- 2019 January 20, John Naughton, “‘The goal is to automate us’: welcome to the age of surveillance capitalism”, in The Guardian[1]:
- Viewed from this perspective, the behaviour of the digital giants looks rather different from the roseate hallucinations of Wired magazine.
Translations
(formal) pink; rosy
Anagrams
Categories:
- English terms inherited from Middle English
- English terms derived from Middle English
- English terms derived from Latin
- English terms suffixed with -ate
- English 3-syllable words
- English terms with IPA pronunciation
- English 2-syllable words
- English lemmas
- English adjectives
- English formal terms
- en:Zoology
- English terms with quotations