wine-dark
English
editAlternative forms
editEtymology
editThe traditional translation/calque of Ancient Greek οἶνοψ (oînops), equivalent to wine + dark.
Adjective
editwine-dark (not comparable)
- (literary, especially of the sea) Resembling the dark color (or perhaps other properties) of red wine.
- 2015, Frederic W. Farrar, Gathering Clouds: A Tale of The Days of Saint Chrysostom:
- He had that type of countenance which dim tradition was already beginning to assign to the Son of Man—the perfectly oval face, the waved and wine-dark hair, the glowing complexion, the eyes whose depths seemed to be lighted by some holy spiritual flame within—of Him who had been fairer than the children of men.
- 2015, Anthony Adolph, Brutus of Troy: And the Quest for the Ancestry of the British, page 200:
- The Trojan War was probably real enough, but the myths of Aeneas crossing the wine-dark Mediterranean to lay the foundations of the Roman Empire in Italy, and Brutus's subsequent journey to fill Britain with descendants of the Trojans, are myths.
Noun
edit- A specific color among several that represent red wine.
Translations
editdark like wine
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