violet

adjectivecommon noun

Syllable Decomposition

violet

from violet, itself from the Latin viola (wild pansy). Horace already uses the word to designate the color of the flower, so viola would already be violet in Latin. There is also the adjective violeus, viola and violeum, with the meaning of "violet in color". Dauzat records the existence of the form violat in the 13th century, referring to the Latin form violatum ("containing violets"), and the form violet in 1328. Corominas traces the form violette back to the 12th century, always with the same etymology.

Definitions

œnologie

Translations

  • germangerman:violett
  • englishenglish:mauve
  • arabicarabic:أرجواني
  • chinesechinese:紫色
  • koreankorean:보라
  • danishdanish:violet
  • spanishspanish:violeta
  • finnishfinnish:violetti
  • greekgreek:μωβ
  • hindihindi:पर्पल
  • italianitalian:viola
  • japanesejapanese:青紫
  • dutchdutch:violetkleurig
  • portugueseportuguese:roxo
  • russianrussian:пурпурный
  • swedishswedish:violett

See also

Violette (pn.) violiste (cn.) violacer (v.) violet (cn.) violette (cn.) violette (adj.) violettes (adj.) violettes (cn.) violets (adj.) violets (cn.) violane (cn.) viole (cn.) violier (cn.) violacé (adj.) violâtre (adj.)