Purpler


[pur-puh l] /ˈpɜr pəl/

noun
1.
any color having components of both red and blue, such as lavender, especially one deep in tone.
2.
cloth or clothing of this hue, especially as formerly worn distinctively by persons of imperial, royal, or other high rank.
3.
the rank or office of a cardinal.
4.
the office of a bishop.
5.
imperial, regal, or princely rank or position.
6.
deep red; crimson.
7.
any of several nymphalid butterflies, as Basilarchia astyanax (red-spotted purple) having blackish wings spotted with red, or Basilarchia arthemis (banded purple or white admiral) having brown wings banded with white.
adjective, purpler, purplest.
8.
of the color purple.
9.
imperial, regal, or princely.
10.
brilliant or showy.
11.
full of exaggerated literary devices and effects; marked by excessively ornate rhetoric:
a purple passage in a novel.
12.
profane or shocking, as language.
verb (used with or without object), purpled, purpling.
13.
to make or become purple.
Idioms
14.
born in / to the purple, of royal or exalted birth:
Those born to the purple are destined to live in the public eye.
/ˈpɜːpəl/
noun
1.
any of various colours with a hue lying between red and blue and often highly saturated; a nonspectral colour
2.
a dye or pigment producing such a colour
3.
cloth of this colour, often used to symbolize royalty or nobility
4.
the purple, high rank; nobility
5.

6.
the purple, bishops collectively
adjective
7.
of the colour purple
8.
(of writing) excessively elaborate or full of imagery: purple prose
9.
noble or royal
n., adj.

Old English purpul, dissimilation (first recorded in Northumbrian, in Lindisfarne gospel) of purpure “purple dye, a purple garment,” purpuren (adj.) “purple,” a borrowing by 9c. from Latin purpura “purple color, purple-dyed cloak, purple dye,” also “shellfish from which purple was made,” and “splendid attire generally,” from Greek porphyra “purple dye, purple” (cf. porphyry), of uncertain origin, perhaps Semitic, originally the name for the shellfish (murex) from which it was obtained. Purpur continued as a parallel form until 15c., and through 19c. in heraldry. As a color name, attested from early 15c. Tyrian purple, produced around Tyre, was prized as dye for royal garments.

Also the color of mourning or penitence (especially in royalty or clergy). Rhetorical for “splendid, gaudy” (of prose) from 1590s. Purple Heart, U.S. decoration for service members wounded in combat, instituted 1932; originally a cloth decoration begun by George Washington in 1782. Hendrix’ Purple Haze (1967) is slang for “LSD.”
v.

c.1400, from purple (n.). Related: Purpled; purpling.

Read Also:

  • Purple-sage

    noun 1. a plant, Salvia leucophylla, of the mint family, native to California, having silvery leaves and purple spikes of flowers.

  • Purple-sandpiper

    noun 1. a sandpiper, Calidris maritima, of arctic regions of the New and Old World, having in winter a slate-gray back with purplish reflections.

  • Purple-shore-crab

    noun 1. See under . noun 1. any of numerous crabs that live along the shoreline between the tidemarks, as Hemigrapsus nudus (purple shore crab) of the Pacific coast of North America.

  • Purple-trillium

    noun 1. (def 1).

  • Purple wire

    jargon, hardware Wire installed by IBM Field Engineers to work around problems discovered during testing or debugging. These are called “purple wires” even when (as is frequently the case) they are yellow. Compare blue wire, yellow wire, and red wire. (1995-04-11)


Disclaimer: Purpler definition / meaning should not be considered complete, up to date, and is not intended to be used in place of a visit, consultation, or advice of a legal, medical, or any other professional. All content on this website is for informational purposes only.