scarlet

pronunciation

How to pronounce scarlet in British English: UK [ˈskɑ:lət]word uk audio image

How to pronounce scarlet in American English: US [ˈskɑrlət] word us audio image

  • Noun:
    a variable color that is vivid red but sometimes with an orange tinge
  • Adjective:
    having any of numerous bright or strong colors reminiscent of the color of blood or cherries or tomatoes or rubies

Word Origin

scarlet
scarlet: [13] Scarlet originally denoted a sumptuous sort of cloth, which came in various colours, not just red. Red was evidently the commonest colour, however, for by the 15th century we find the word scarlet being used for ‘red’. It was borrowed from Old French escarlate, but where that came from is not known (some have derived it from Persian saqalāt ‘rich cloth’, but this has not been conclusively established).
scarlet (n.)
mid-13c., "rich cloth" (often, but not necessarily, bright red), from a shortened form of Old French escarlate "scarlet (color), top-quality fabric" (12c., Modern French écarlate), from Medieval Latin scarlatum "scarlet, cloth of scarlet" (also source of Italian scarlatto, Spanish escarlate), probably via a Middle Eastern source (compare Arabic siqillat "fine cloth"), from Medieval Greek and ultimately from Late Latin sigillatus "clothes and cloth decorated with small symbols or figures," literally "sealed," past participle of sigillare, from the root of sign (n.). In English as the name of a color, attested from late 14c. As an adjective from c. 1300. Scarlet lady, etc. (Isa. i:18, Rev. xvii:1-5) is from notion of "red with shame or indignation." Scarlet fever is from 1670s, so called for its characteristic rash. Scarlet oak, a New World tree, attested from 1590s. Scarlet letter traces to Hawthorne's story (1850). German Scharlach, Dutch scharlaken show influence of words cognate with English lake (n.2).

Example

1. Jill wore a vivid green robe , rather too long for her , and over that a scarlet mantle fringed with white fur .
2. Subconsciously both sexes are engaged by scarlet wet lips because they symbolize youth , sex and reproductive ability of progeny .
3. Then her skin turned scarlet and started becoming infected .
4. And award-winning australian director catherine scott has set out to demystify both in her new documentary , scarlet road : a sex worker 's journey .
5. There are lobster t-shirts and lobster bobblehead dolls and inflatable lobster pool toys and clamp-on lobster hats with big scarlet claws that wobble on springs .

more: >How to Use "scarlet" with Example Sentences