White is the lightest color and is achromatic (having no hue). It is the color of objects such as snow, chalk, and milk, and is the opposite of black. White objects fully reflect and scatter all the visible wavelengths of light. White on television and computer screens is created by a mixture of red, blue, and green light. The color white can be given with white pigments, especially titanium dioxide.[2]
White | |
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Clockwise, from top left: Beluga whale; Pope Francis; Milan Cathedral façade; White Cliffs of Dover, England; Masjid al-Haram, Saudi Arabia; Bride at a Shinto wedding. |
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Color coordinates | |
Hex triplet | #FFFFFF |
sRGBB (r, g, b) | (255, 255, 255) |
HSV (h, s, v) | (0°, 0%, 100%) |
CIELChuv (L, C, h) | (100, 0, 0°) |
Source | HTML/CSS[1] |
B: Normalized to [0–255] (byte) H: Normalized to [0–100] (hundred) |
In ancient Egypt and ancient Rome, priestesses wore white as a symbol of purity, and Romans wore white togas as symbols of citizenship. In the Middle Ages and Renaissance a white unicorn symbolized chastity, and a white lamb sacrifice and purity. It was the royal color of the kings of France, and of the monarchist movement that opposed the Bolsheviks during the Russian Civil War (1917–1922). Greek temples and Roman temples were faced with white marble, and beginning in the 18th century, with the advent of neoclassical architecture, white became the most common color of new churches, capitols and other government buildings, especially in the United States. It was also widely used in 20th century modern architecture as a symbol of modernity and simplicity.
According to surveys in Europe and the United States, white is the color most often associated with perfection, the good, honesty, cleanliness, the beginning, the new, neutrality, and exactitude.[3] White is an important color for almost all world religions. The pope, the head of the Roman Catholic Church, has worn white since 1566, as a symbol of purity and sacrifice. In Islam, and in the Shinto religion of Japan, it is worn by pilgrims. In Western cultures and in Japan, white is the most common color for wedding dresses, symbolizing purity and virginity. In many Asian cultures, white is also the color of mourning.[4]
Etymology
The word white continues Old English hwīt, ultimately from a Common Germanic *χwītaz also reflected in OHG (h)wîz, ON hvítr, Goth. ƕeits. The root is ultimately from Proto-Indo-European language *kwid-, surviving also in Sanskrit śveta «to be white or bright»[5] and Slavonic světŭ «light».[6][7] The Icelandic word for white, hvítur, is directly derived from the Old Norse form of the word hvítr. Common Germanic also had the word *blankaz («white, bright, blinding»), borrowed into Late Latin as *blancus, which provided the source for Romance words for «white» (Catalan, Occitan and French blanc, Spanish blanco, Italian bianco, Galician-Portuguese branco, etc.). The antonym of white is black.
Some non-European languages have a wide variety of terms for white. The Inuit language has seven different words for seven different nuances of white. Sanskrit has specific words for bright white, the white of teeth, the white of sandalwood, the white of the autumn moon, the white of silver, the white of cow’s milk, the white of pearls, the white of a ray of sunlight, and the white of stars. Japanese has six different words, depending upon brilliance or dullness, or if the color is inert or dynamic.[8]
History and art
Prehistoric and ancient history
White was one of the first colors used in art. The Lascaux Cave in France contains drawings of bulls and other animals drawn by paleolithic artists between 18,000 and 17,000 years ago. Paleolithic artists used calcite or chalk, sometimes as a background, sometimes as a highlight, along with charcoal and red and yellow ochre in their vivid cave paintings.[9][10]
In ancient Egypt, white was connected with the goddess Isis. The priests and priestesses of Isis dressed only in white linen, and it was used to wrap mummies.[11]
In Greece and other ancient civilizations, white was often associated with mother’s milk. In Greek mythology, the chief god Zeus was nourished at the breast of the nymph Amalthea. In the Talmud, milk was one of four sacred substances, along with wine, honey, and the rose.[12]
The ancient Greeks saw the world in terms of darkness and light, so white was a fundamental color, According to Pliny the Elder in his Natural History, Apelles (4th century BC) and the other famous painters of ancient Greece used only four colors in their paintings; white, red, yellow and black.[13] For painting, the Greeks used the highly toxic pigment lead white, made by a long and laborious process.[14]
A plain white toga, known as a toga virilis, was worn for ceremonial occasions by all Roman citizens over the age of 14–18. Magistrates and certain priests wore a toga praetexta, with a broad purple stripe.
In the time of the Emperor Augustus, no Roman man was allowed to appear in the Roman forum without a toga.
The ancient Romans had two words for white; albus, a plain white, (the source of the word albino); and candidus, a brighter white. A man who wanted public office in Rome wore a white toga brightened with chalk, called a toga candida, the origin of the word candidate. The Latin word candere meant to shine, to be bright. It was the origin of the words candle and candid.[15]
In ancient Rome, the priestesses of the goddess Vesta dressed in white linen robes, a white palla or shawl, and a white veil. They protected the sacred fire and the penates of Rome. White symbolized their purity, loyalty, and chastity.[11]
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Prehistoric paintings in Chauvet Cave, France (30,000 to 32,000 BC)
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Painting of the goddess Isis (1380–1385 BC). The priests of her cult wore white linen.
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Paintings of women in white from a tomb (1448–1422 BC).
Postclassical history
The early Christian church adopted the Roman symbolism of white as the color of purity, sacrifice and virtue. It became the color worn by priests during Mass, the color worn by monks of the Cistercian Order, and, under Pope Pius V, a former monk of the Dominican Order, it became the official color worn by the pope himself. Monks of the Order of Saint Benedict dressed in the white or gray of natural undyed wool, but later changed to black, the color of humility and penitence.
Postclassical history art, the white lamb became the symbol of the sacrifice of Christ on behalf of mankind. John the Baptist described Christ as the lamb of God, who took the sins of the world upon himself. The white lamb was the center of one of the most famous paintings of the Medieval period, the Ghent Altarpiece by Jan van Eyck.[16]
White was also the symbolic color of the transfiguration. The Gospel of Saint Mark describes Jesus’ clothing in this event as «shining, exceeding white as snow.» Artists such as Fra Angelico used their skill to capture the whiteness of his garments. In his painting of the transfiguration at the Convent of Saint Mark in Florence, Fra Angelico emphasized the white garment by using a light gold background, placed in an almond-shaped halo.[17]
The white unicorn was a common subject of Postclassical history manuscripts, paintings and tapestries. It was a symbol of purity, chastity and grace, which could only be captured by a virgin. It was often portrayed in the lap of the Virgin Mary.[18]
During the Postclassical history, painters rarely ever mixed colors; but in the Renaissance, the influential humanist and scholar Leon Battista Alberti encouraged artists to add white to their colors to make them lighter, brighter, and to add hilaritas, or gaiety. Many painters followed his advice, and the palette of the Renaissance was considerably brighter.[19]
Modern history
Until the 16th century, white was commonly worn by widows as a color of mourning. The widows of the kings of France wore white until Anne of Brittany in the 16th century. A white tunic was also worn by many knights, along with a red cloak, which showed the knights were willing to give their blood for the king or Church.
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The monks of the order of Saint Benedict (circa 480–542) first dressed in undyed white or gray wool robes, here shown in painting by Sodoma on the life of Saint Benedict (1504). They later changed to black robes, the color of humility and penitence.
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Under Pope Pius V (1504–1572), a former monk of the Dominican Order, white became the official color worn by the Pope.
18th and 19th centuries
White was the dominant color of architectural interiors in the Baroque period and especially the Rococo style that followed it in the 18th century. Church interiors were designed to show the power, glory and wealth of the church. They seemed to be alive, filled with curves, asymmetry, mirrors, gilding, statuary and reliefs, unified by white.
White was also a fashionable color for both men and women in the 18th century. Men in the aristocracy and upper classes wore powdered white wigs and white stockings, and women wore elaborate embroidered white and pastel gowns.
After the French Revolution, a more austere white (blanc cassé) became the most fashionable color in women’s costumes which were modeled after the outfits of Ancient Greece and Republican Rome. Because of the rather revealing design of these dresses, the women wearing them were called les merveilleuses (the marvellous) by French men of that era.[20] The Empire style under Emperor Napoléon I was modeled after the more conservative outfits of Ancient Imperial Rome. The dresses were high in fashion but low in warmth considering the more severe weather conditions of northern France; in 1814 the former wife of Napoleon, Joséphine de Beauharnais, caught pneumonia and died after taking a walk in the cold night air with Tsar Alexander I of Russia.[21]
White was the universal color of both men and women’s underwear and of sheets in the 18th and 19th centuries. It was unthinkable to have sheets or underwear of any other color. The reason was simple; the manner of washing linen in boiling water caused colors to fade. When linen was worn out, it was collected and turned into high-quality paper.[22]
The 19th-century American painter James McNeill Whistler (1834–1903), working at the same time as the French impressionists, created a series of paintings with musical titles where he used color to create moods, the way composers used music. His painting Symphony in White No. 1 – The White Girl, which used his mistress Joanna Hiffernan as a model, used delicate colors to portray innocence and fragility, and a moment of uncertainty.[23]
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President George Washington in a white powdered wig. The first five Presidents of the United States wore dark suits with powdered wigs for formal occasions.
20th and 21st centuries
The White movement was the opposition that formed against the Bolsheviks during the Russian Civil War, which followed the Russian Revolution in 1917. It was finally defeated by the Bolsheviks in 1921–22, and many of its members emigrated to Europe.
At the end of the 19th century, lead white was still the most popular pigment; but between 1916 and 1918, chemical companies in Norway and the United States began to produce titanium white, made from titanium oxide. It had first been identified in the 18th century by the German chemist Martin Klaproth, who also discovered uranium. It had twice the covering power of lead white, and was the brightest white pigment known. By 1945, 80 percent of the white pigments sold were titanium white.[24]
The absoluteness of white appealed to modernist painters. It was used in its simplest form by the Russian suprematist painter Kazimir Malevich in his 1917 painting ‘the white square,’ the companion to his earlier ‘black square.’ It was also used by the Dutch modernist painter Piet Mondrian. His most famous paintings consisted of a pure white canvas with grid of vertical and horizontal black lines and rectangles of primary colors.
Black and white also appealed to modernist architects, such as Le Corbusier (1887–1965). He said a house was «a machine for living in» and called for a «calm and powerful architecture» built of reinforced concrete and steel, without any ornament or frills.[25] Almost all the buildings of contemporary architect Richard Meier, such as his museum in Rome to house the ancient Roman Ara Pacis, or Altar of Peace, are stark white, in the tradition of Le Corbusier.
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Poster for the White Army during the Russian Civil War (1917–22). The poster says: «for a United Russia.»
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The Villa Savoye (1928–31) by Le Corbusier; Le Corbusier called for a «calm and powerful» architecture built of steel and reinforced concrete, without color or ornament.
Scientific understanding (color science)
Light is perceived by the human visual system as white when the incoming light to the eye stimulates all three types of color sensitive cone cells in the eye in roughly equal amounts.[26] Materials that do not emit light themselves appear white if their surfaces reflect back most of the light that strikes them in a diffuse way.
White light
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In the RGB color model, used to create colors on TV and computer screens, white is made by mixing red, blue and green light at full intensity.
In 1666, Isaac Newton demonstrated that white light was composed of multiple colors by passing it through a prism to break it up into components then using a second prism to reassemble them. Before Newton, most scientists believed that white was the fundamental color of light.[27]
White light can be generated by the sun, by stars, or by earthbound sources such as fluorescent lamps, white LEDs and incandescent bulbs. On the screen of a color television or computer, white is produced by mixing the primary colors of light: red, green and blue (RGB) at full intensity, a process called additive mixing (see image above). White light can be fabricated using light with only two wavelengths, for instance by mixing light from a red and cyan laser or yellow and blue lasers. This light will however have very few practical applications since color rendering of objects will be greatly distorted.
The fact that light sources with vastly different spectral power distributions can result in a similar sensory experience is due to the way the light is processed by the visual system. One color that arises from two different spectral power distributions is called a metamerism.
Many of the light sources that emit white light emit light at almost all visible wavelengths (sun light, incandescent lamps of various Color temperatures). This has led to the notion that white light can be defined as a mixture of «all colors» or «all visible wavelengths».[28][29] This widespread idea is a misconception,[citation needed] and might originally stem from the fact that Newton discovered that sunlight is composed of light with wavelengths across the visible spectrum. Concluding that since «all colors» produce white light then white must be made up of «all colors» is a common logical error called affirming the consequent, which might be the cause of the misunderstanding.
A range of spectral distributions of light sources can be perceived as white—there is no single, unique specification of «white light». For example, when buying a «white» light bulb, one might buy one labeled 2700K, 6000K, etc., which produce light having very different spectral distributions, and yet this will not prevent the user from identifying the color of objects that those light bulbs illuminate.[30]
White objects
Color vision allows us to distinguish different objects by their color. In order to do so, color constancy can keep the perceived color of an object relatively unchanged when the illumination changes among various broad (whitish) spectral distributions of light.[30]
The same principle is used in photography and cinematography where the choice of white point determines a transformation of all other color stimuli. Changes in or manipulation of the white point can be used to explain some optical illusions such as The dress.
While there is no single, unique specification of «white light», there is indeed a unique specification of «white object», or, more specifically, «white surface».
A perfectly white surface diffusely reflects (scatters) all visible light that strikes it, without absorbing any, irrespective of the light’s wavelength or spectral distribution.[31][32]
Since it does not absorb any of the incident light, white is the lightest possible color.
If the reflection is not diffuse but rather specular, this describes a mirror rather than a white surface.[33][31]
Reflection of 100% of incident light at all wavelengths is a form of uniform reflectance, so white is an achromatic color, meaning a color without hue.[34][35] The color stimulus produced by the perfect diffuser is usually considered to be an achromatic stimulus for all illuminants, except for those whose light sources appear to be highly chromatic.[36]
Color constancy is achieved by chromatic adaptation. The International Commission on Illumination defines white (adapted) as «a color stimulus that an observer who is [chromatically] adapted to the viewing environment would judge to be perfectly achromatic and to have a luminance factor of unity. The color stimulus that is considered to be the adapted white may be different at different locations within a scene.[37]
White features in nature
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Snow is composed of ice and air; it scatters or reflects sunlight without absorbing other colors of the spectrum.
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Cumulus clouds look white because the water droplets reflect and scatter the sunlight without absorbing other colors.
Beaches with sand containing high amounts of quartz or eroded limestone also appear white, since quartz and limestone reflect or scatter sunlight, rather than absorbing it. Tropical white sand beaches may also have a high quantity of white calcium carbonate from tiny bits of seashells ground to fine sand by the action of the waves.[38]
The White Cliffs of Dover take their white color from the large amount of chalk, made of limestone, which they contain, which reflects the sunlight.
Snow is a mixture of air and tiny ice crystals. When white sunlight enters snow, very little of the spectrum is absorbed; almost all of the light is reflected or scattered by the air and water molecules, so the snow appears to be the color of sunlight, white. Sometimes the light bounces around inside the ice crystals before being scattered, making the snow seem to sparkle.[39]
In the case of glaciers, the ice is more tightly pressed together and contains little air. As sunlight enters the ice, more light of the red spectrum is absorbed, so the light scattered will be bluish.[40]
Clouds are white for the same reason as ice. They are composed of water droplets or ice crystals mixed with air, very little light that strikes them is absorbed, and most of the light is scattered, appearing to the eye as white. Shadows of other clouds above can make clouds look gray, and some clouds have their own shadow on the bottom of the cloud.[41]
Many mountains with winter or year-round snow cover are named accordingly: Mauna Kea means white mountain in Hawaiian, Mont Blanc means white mountain in French. Changbai Mountains literally meaning perpetually white mountains, marks the border between China and Korea.
White materials
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Titanium white, made with titanium dioxide, is the brightest white paint available. It also colors most toothpaste and sunscreen.
Chalk is a type of limestone, made of the mineral calcite, or calcium carbonate. It was originally deposited under the sea as the scales or plates of tiny micro-organisms called Coccolithophore. It was the first white pigment used by prehistoric artists in cave paintings. The chalk used on blackboards today is usually made of gypsum or calcium sulphate, a powder pressed into sticks.
Bianco di San Giovanni is a pigment used in the Renaissance, which was described by the painter Cennino Cennini in the 15th century. It is similar to chalk, made of calcium carbonate with calcium hydroxide. It was made of dried lime which was made into a powder, then soaked in water for eight days, with the water changed each day. It was then made into cakes and dried in the sun.[42]
Lead white was being produced during the 4th century BC; the process is described is Pliny the Elder, Vitruvius and the ancient Greek author Theophrastus. Pieces of lead were put into clay pots which had a separate compartment filled with vinegar. The pots in turn were piled on shelves close to cow dung. The combined fumes of the vinegar and the cow dung caused the lead to corrode into lead carbonate. It was a slow process which could take a month or more. It made an excellent white and was used by artists for centuries, but it was also toxic. It was replaced in the 19th century by zinc white and titanium white.[43]
Titanium white is the most popular white for artists today; it is the brightest available white pigment, and has twice the coverage of lead white. It first became commercially available in 1921. It is made out of titanium dioxide, from the minerals brookite, anatase, rutile, or ilmenite, currently the major source. Because of its brilliant whiteness, it is used as a colorant for most toothpaste and sunscreen.[44]
Zinc white is made from zinc oxide. It is similar to but not as opaque as titanium white. It is added to some foods to enrich them with zinc, an important nutrient.[45] Chinese white is a variety of zinc white made for artists.[46]
Some materials can be made to look «whiter than white», this is achieved using optical brightener agents (OBA). These are chemical compounds that absorb light in the ultraviolet and violet region (usually 340–370 nm) of the electromagnetic spectrum, and re-emit light in the blue region (typically 420–470 nm). OBAs are often used in paper and clothing to create an impression of very bright white. This is due to the fact that the materials actually send out more visible light than they receive.
Bleach and bleaching
Bleaching is a process for whitening fabrics which has been practiced for thousands of years. Sometimes it was simply a matter of leaving the fabric in the sun, to be faded by the bright light. In the 18th century several scientists developed varieties of chlorine bleach, including sodium hypochlorite and calcium hypochlorite (bleaching powder).[47] Bleaching agents that do not contain chlorine most often are based on peroxides, such as hydrogen peroxide, sodium percarbonate and sodium perborate. While most bleaches are oxidizing agents, a fewer number are reducing agents such as sodium dithionite.
Bleaches attack the chromophores, the part of a molecule which absorbs light and causes fabrics to have different colors. An oxidizing bleach works by breaking the chemical bonds that make up the chromophore. This changes the molecule into a different substance that either does not contain a chromophore, or contains a chromophore that does not absorb visible light. A reducing bleach works by converting double bonds in the chromophore into single bonds. This eliminates the ability of the chromophore to absorb visible light.[48]
Sunlight acts as a bleach through a similar process. High energy photons of light, often in the violet or ultraviolet range, can disrupt the bonds in the chromophore, rendering the resulting substance colorless.[49]
Some detergents go one step further; they contain fluorescent chemicals which glow, making the fabric look literally whiter than white.[50]
In the natural world
Astronomy
Image of Sirius A and Sirius B taken by the Hubble Space Telescope. Sirius B, a white dwarf, is the faint pinprick of light to the lower left of the much brighter Sirius A.
A white dwarf is a stellar remnant composed mostly of electron-degenerate matter. They are very dense; a white dwarf’s mass is comparable to that of the Sun and its volume is comparable to that of the Earth. Its faint luminosity comes from the emission of stored thermal energy. A white dwarf is very hot when it is formed, but since it has no source of energy, it will gradually radiate away its energy and cool down. This means that its radiation, which initially has a high color temperature, will lessen and redden with time. Over a very long time, a white dwarf will cool to temperatures at which it will no longer emit significant heat or light, and it will become a cold black dwarf.[51] However, since no white dwarf can be older than the Age of the universe (approximately 13.8 billion years),[52] even the oldest white dwarfs still radiate at temperatures of a few thousand kelvins, and no black dwarfs are thought to exist yet.
An A-type main-sequence star (A V) or A dwarf star is a main-sequence (hydrogen-burning) star of spectral type A and luminosity class V. These stars have spectra which are defined by strong hydrogen Balmer absorption lines.[53][54] They have masses from 1.4 to 2.1 times the mass of the Sun and surface temperatures between 7600 and 11 500 K.[55]
Biology
White animals use their color as a form of camouflage in winter. Animals such as penguins are countershaded with white bellies, again as camouflage.
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The dove is an international symbol of peace.
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The ermine, or stoat. Once considered the most noble of animals because it would rather die than dirty its fur.
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The Beluga whale lives in Arctic and sub-arctic waters, where its color is an effective camouflage
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A Polar Bear in Alaska. Its color is a form of camouflage
Religion and culture
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Thousands of pilgrims in white gather in Mecca for the beginning of their pilgrimage, or Hajj.
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The Buddhist deity Tara is often depicted with white skin.
White is an important symbolic color in most religions and cultures, usually because of its association with purity.
In the Roman Catholic Church, white is associated with Jesus Christ, innocence and sacrifice. Since the Middle Ages, priests wear a white cassock in many of the most important ceremonies and religious services connected with events in the life of Christ. White is worn by priests at Christmas, during Easter, and during celebrations connected with the other events of the life of Christ, such as Corpus Christi Sunday, and Trinity Sunday. It is also worn at the services dedicated to the Virgin Mary, and to those Saints who were not martyred, as well as other special occasions, such as the ordination of priests and the installation of new bishops. Within the hierarchy of the church, lighter colors indicated higher rank; ordinary priests wore black; bishops wore violet, cardinals wore red, and outside a church, only the pope would wear white.[56] (Popes occasionally wore white in the Middle Ages, but usually wore red. Popes have worn white regularly since 1566, when Pope Pius V, a member of the Dominican Order, began the practice.) White is the color of the Dominican Order.
In the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints the color white is used as a symbol of purity, innocence, and cleanliness, particularly in religious ceremonies such as baptism[57] and temple ceremonies.[58] In temple ceremonies, white clothing is also worn by all participants, both men and women, to also symbolize unity and equality before God.[59][60]
In Islam, white clothing is worn during required pilgrimage to Mecca, or Ihram pilgrimage (Hajj) Hajj. Called Ihram clothing, men’s garments often consist of two white un-hemmed sheets (usually towelling material). The top (the riḍā) is draped over the torso and the bottom (the izār) is secured by a belt; plus a pair of sandals. Women’s clothing varies considerably and reflects regional as well as religious influences. Ihram is typically worn during Dhu al-Hijjah, the last month in the Islamic calendar.
White also has a long history of use as a religious and political symbol in Islam, beginning with the white banner that tradition ascribes to the Quraysh, the tribe to which Muhammad belonged. The Umayyad dynasty also used white as its dynastic color, following the personal banner of its founder, Mu’awiya I, while the Shi’ite Fatimids also chose white to highlight their opposition to the Sunni Abbasid Caliphate, whose color was black.[61]
In Judaism, during the rituals of Yom Kippur, the ceremony of atonement, the rabbi dresses in white, as do the members of the congregation, to restore the bonds between God and his followers.
In the traditional Japanese religion of Shinto, an area of white gravel or stones marks a sacred place, called a niwa. These places were dedicated to the kami, spirits which had descended from the heavens or had come across the sea. Later, temples of Zen Buddhism in Japan often featured a Zen garden, where white sand or gravel was carefully raked to resemble rivers or streams, designed as objects of meditation.[62]
In the temples of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church or also known as Mormon), White clothing is worn inside once they have been officially dedicated, due to white symbolizing purity.[63]
Many religions symbolize heaven by using a sky with white clouds. This phenomenon is not limited to western culture; in Yoruba religion, the orisha Obatala in the Ifá tradition is represented by white. Obatala is associated with calmness, morality, old age, and purity.
In Theosophy and similar religions, the deities called the Great White Brotherhood are said to have white auras.[64]
In some Asian and Slavic cultures, white is considered to be a color that represents death.[65] White also represented death in ancient Egypt, representing the lifeless desert that covered much of the country; black was held to be the color of life, representing the mud-covered fertile lands created by the flooding of the Nile and giving the country its name (Kemet, or «black land»).
In China, Korea, and some other Asian countries, white, or more precisely, the whitish color of undyed linen, is the color of mourning and funerals.[66]
In traditional China, undyed linen clothing is worn at funerals. As time passes, the bereaved can gradually wear clothing dyed with colors, then with darker colors. Small sacks of quicklime, one for each year of the life of the deceased are placed around the body to protect it against impurity in the next world, and white paper flowers are placed around the body.[67]
In China and other Asian countries, white is the color of reincarnation, showing that death is not a permanent separation from the world.[68]
In China, white is associated with the masculine (the yang of the yin and yang); with the unicorn and tiger; with the fur of an animal; with the direction of west; with the element metal; and with the autumn season.[69]
In Japan, undyed linen white robes are worn by pilgrims for rituals of purification, and bathing in sacred rivers. In the mountains, pilgrims wear costumes of undyed jute to symbolize purity. A white kimono is often placed in the casket with the deceased for the journey to the other world, as white represents death sometimes.[70] Condolence gifts, or kooden, are tied with black and white ribbons and wrapped in white paper, protecting the contents from the impurities of the other world.[71]
In India, it is the color of purity, divinity, detachment and serenity. In Hindi, the name Sweta means white.
In Tibetan Buddhism, white robes were reserved for the lama of a monastery.
In the Bedouin and some other pastoral cultures, there is a strong connection between milk and white, which is considered the color of gratitude, esteem, joy, good fortune and fertility.[72]
In Paganism, it is used for peace, innocence, illumination, and purity. It can also be used to stand for any color.[73] White is also associated with cleansing, a Pagan practice that cleans something using the elements. In Wicca, a white-handled knife called the boline is used in rituals.[74]
Political movements
White is often associated with monarchism. The association originally came from the white flag of the Bourbon dynasty of France. White became the banner of the royalist rebellions against the French Revolution (see Revolt in the Vendée).
During the Civil War which followed the Russian Revolution of 1917, the White Army, a coalition of monarchists, nationalists and liberals, fought unsuccessfully against the Red Army of the Bolsheviks. A similar battle between reds and whites took place during the Civil War in Finland in the same period.
The Ku Klux Klan is a racist and anti-immigrant organization which flourished in the Southern United States after the American Civil War. They wore white robes and hoods, burned crosses and violently attacked and murdered black Americans.
In Iran, the White Revolution was a series of social and political reforms launched in 1963 by the last Shah of Iran before his downfall.
White is also associated with peace and passive resistance. The white ribbon is worn by movements denouncing violence against women and the White Rose was a non-violent resistance group in Nazi Germany.
Selected national flags featuring white
White is a common color in national flags, though its symbolism varies widely. The white in the flag of the United States and flag of the United Kingdom comes from traditional red St George’s Cross on a white background of the historic flag of England. The white in the flag of France represents either the monarchy or «white, the ancient French color» according to the Marquis de Lafayette.
Many flags in the Arab world use the colors of the flag of the Arab Revolt of 1916; red, white, green and black. These include the flags of Egypt, Palestine, Jordan, Syria, Kuwait and Iraq.
The Philippines also use white as their symbol for unity in their flag.
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Flag of the Bourbons, royal family of France until the French Revolution and during the restoration of the monarchy afterwards.
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The Flag of Vatican City (1929). The white and gold colors symbolize the colors of the keys to heaven given by Jesus Christ to Saint Peter: the gold of spiritual power, the white of worldly power. The keys have been the Papal symbol since the 13th century.
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The flag of India (1947). White represents «light, the path of truth».[75]
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The flag of Ireland. According to the Irish government press office, «The green represents the older Gaelic tradition while the orange represents the supporters of William of Orange. The white in the centre signifies a lasting truce between the ‘Orange’ and the ‘Green’. «[76]
Idioms and expressions
- To whitewash something is to conceal an unpleasant reality.
- A white lie is an innocent lie told out of politeness.
- White noise is the noise of all the frequencies of sound combined. It is used to cover up unwanted noise.
- A white knight in finance is a friendly investor who steps in to rescue a company from a hostile takeover.
- White-collar workers are those who work in offices, as opposed to blue-collar workers, who work with their hands in factories or workshops.
- A white paper is an authoritative report on a major issue by a team of experts; a government report outlining policy; or a short treatise whose purpose is to educate industry customers. Associating a paper with white may signify clean facts and unbiased information.
- The white feather is a symbol of cowardice, particularly in Britain.[77] It supposedly comes from cockfighting and the belief that a cockerel sporting a white feather in its tail is likely to be a poor fighter. At the beginning of the First World War, women in England were encouraged to give white feathers to men who had not enlisted in the British Armed Forces.[78]
- In the US, a white shoe firm is an older, conservative firm, usually in a field such as banking or law. The phrase derives from the «white bucks», laced suede or buckskin shoes with red soles, long popular in the Ivy League colleges.[79]
- In Russia, the nobility are sometimes described as white bone (белая кость, bélaya kost’), commoners as black bone.[80]
Associations and symbolism
Innocence and sacrifice
In Western culture, white is the color most often associated with innocence, or purity.[81] In the Bible and in Temple Judaism, white animals such as lambs were sacrificed to expiate sins. The white lily is considered the flower of purity and innocence, and is often associated with the Virgin Mary.
Beginnings
White is the color in Western culture most often associated with beginnings. In Christianity, children are baptized and first take communion wearing white. Christ after the Resurrection is traditionally portrayed dressed in white.
Queen Elizabeth II wore white when she opened each session of British Parliament. In high society, debutantes traditionally wear white for their first ball.
Weddings
White has long been the traditional color worn by brides at royal weddings, but the white wedding gown for ordinary people appeared in the 19th century. Before that time, most brides wore their best Sunday clothing, of whatever color.[82] The white lace wedding gown of Queen Victoria in 1840 had a large impact on the color and fashion of wedding dresses in both Europe and America down to the present day.
-
The wedding dress of Queen Victoria (1840) set the fashion for wedding dresses of the Victorian era and for the 20th century.
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Japanese formal wedding dress still used today.
Cleanliness
White is the color most associated with cleanliness. Objects which are expected to be clean, such as refrigerators and dishes, toilets and sinks, bed linen and towels, are traditionally white. White was the traditional color of the coats of doctors, nurses, scientists and laboratory technicians, though nowadays a pale blue or green is often used. White is also the color most often worn by chefs, bakers, and butchers, and the color of the aprons of waiters in French restaurants.[83]
Ghosts, phantoms and two of the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse
The woman in white, a familiar figure in European ghost stories
The biblical Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. Conquest, with a bow, rides a white horse. Death rides a pale or light green horse (painting by Viktor Vasnetsov, 1887).
White is the color associated with ghosts and phantoms. In the past the dead were traditionally buried in a white shroud. Ghosts are said to be the spirits of the dead who, for various reasons, are unable to rest or enter heaven, and so walk the earth in their white shrouds. White is also connected with the paleness of death. A common expression in English is «pale as a ghost.»[84]
The White Lady, Weiße Frau, or dame blanche is a familiar figure in English, German and French ghost stories. She is a spectral apparition of a female clad in white, in most cases the ghost of an ancestor, sometimes giving warning about death and disaster. The most notable Weiße Frau is the legendary ghost of the German Hohenzollern dynasty.
Seeing a white horse in a dream is said to be presentiment of death.[85] In the Book of Revelation, the last book in the New Testament of the Bible, the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse are supposed to announce the Apocalypse before the Last Judgement. The man on a white horse with a bow and arrow, according to different interpretations, represents either War and Conquest, the Antichrist, or Christ himself, cleansing the world of sin. Death rides a horse whose color is described in ancient Greek as khlōros (χλωρός) in the original Koine Greek,[86] which can mean either green/greenish-yellow or pale/pallid.[87]
Opposite of black
In Taoism, white represents the yang or male energy, one of the two complementary natures of the universe.
Black and white often represent the contrast between light and darkness, day and night, male and female, good and evil.
In taoism, the two complementary natures of the universe, yin and yang, are often symbolized in black and white, Ancient games of strategy, such as go and chess, use black and white to represent the two sides.
In the French monarchy, white symbolized the King and his power par la grâce de Dieu («by the grace of God») and in contrast black was the color of the queen who according to the Salic Law which excluded women from the throne (and thus from power) could never become the ruling monarch.
Black and white also often represent formality and seriousness, as in the costumes of judges and priests, business suits, of formal evening dress. Monks of the Dominican Order wear a black cloak over a white habit. Until 1972, agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation were informally required by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover to wear white shirts with their suits, to project the correct image of the FBI.[88]
Names taken from white
White is the source of more names for women in western countries than any other color.[89] Names taken from white include Alba, Albine (Latin). Blandine, Blanche and Blanchette (French); Bianca (Italian); Jennifer (Celt); Genevieve, Candice (from Latin Candida); Fenela, Fiona and Finola (Irish); Gwendoline, Gwenael, Nol(g)wen (white woman) (Celt), Nives (Spanish) and Zuria (Basque).[90]
In addition many names come from white flowers: Camille, Daisy, Lily, Lili, Magnolie, Jasmine, Yasemine, Leila, Marguerite, Rosalba, and others.
Other names come from the white pearl; Pearl, Margarita (Latin), Margaret, Margarethe, Marga, Grete, Rita, Gitta, Marjorie, Margot.
Temples, churches and government buildings
Since ancient times, temples, churches, and many government buildings in many countries have traditionally been white, the color associated with religious and civic virtue. The Parthenon and other ancient temples of Greece, and the buildings of the Roman Forum were mostly made of or clad in white marble, though it is now known that some of these ancient buildings were actually brightly painted.[91] The Roman tradition of using white stone for government buildings and churches was revived in the Renaissance and especially in the neoclassic style of the 18th and 19th centuries. White stone became the material of choice for government buildings in Washington D.C. and other American cities. European cathedrals were also usually built of white or light-colored stone, though many darkened over the centuries from smoke and soot.
The Renaissance architect and scholar Leon Battista Alberti wrote in 1452 that churches should be plastered white on the inside, since white was the only appropriate color for reflection and meditation.[92] Traditional Cistercian architecture also places a high emphasis on white for similar reasons.[93] After the Reformation, Calvinist churches in the Netherlands were whitewashed and sober inside, a tradition that was also followed in the Protestant churches of New England, such as Old North Church in Boston.
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Although the Parthenon in Athens (5th century BC) is white today, it was originally painted with many colors
Ethnography
People of the Caucasian race are often referred to simply as white. The United States Census Bureau defines white people as those «having origins in any of the original peoples of Europe, the Middle East, or North Africa. It includes people who reported «white» or wrote in entries such as Irish, German, Italian, Lebanese, Near Easterner, Arab, or Polish.»[94] White people constitute the majority of the U.S. population, with a total of 204,277,273 or 61.6% of the population in the 2020 United States Census.
White flag
A white flag has long been used to represent either surrender or a request for a truce. It is believed to have originated in the 15th century, during the Hundred Years’ War between France and England, when multicolored flags, as well as firearms, came into common use by European armies. The white flag was officially recognized as a request to cease hostilities by the Geneva Convention of 1949.[95]
Vexillology and heraldry
In English heraldry, white or silver signified brightness, purity, virtue, and innocence.[96]
See also
- Color realism
- List of colors
- Variations of white
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in the perceptual sense: perceived colour devoid of hue
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- Heller, Eva (2000). Psychologie de la couleur – Effets et symboliques. Pyramyd (French translation). ISBN 978-2-35017-156-2.
- Pastoureau, Michel (2005). Le petit livre des couleurs. Editions du Panama. ISBN 978-2-7578-0310-3.
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- Varichon, Anne (2005). Couleurs – pigments et teintures dans les mains des peuples (in French). Editions de Seuil. ISBN 978-2-02-084697-4.
- Zuffi, Stefano (2012). Color in Art. Abrams. ISBN 978-1-4197-0111-5.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to White.
Look up white in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
- Abkhaz: ашкәакәа (aŝkʷʼakʷʼa)
- Acehnese: puteh
- Adyghe: фыжьы (fəźə)
- Afrikaans: wit
- Ahom: 𑜁𑜧 (khaw), 𑜁𑜨𑜧 (khow)
- Ainu: レタㇻ (retar)
- Aklanon: maputi’
- Albanian: bardhë
- Alviri-Vidari: (Vidari) ایسبی (isbi), ایسپی (ispi)
- American Sign Language: 5@Chest-PalmBack FlatO@NearChest-PalmBack
- Amharic: ነጭ (näč̣)
- Apache:
- Western Apache: łigai
- Arabic: أَبْيَض m (ʔabyaḍ), بَيْضَاء f (bayḍāʔ), بِيض pl (bīḍ)
- Egyptian Arabic: أبيض (abyaḍ)
- Armenian: սպիտակ (spitak)
- Aromanian: albu (roa-rup)
- Asháninka: kitamaari
- Assamese: বগা (boga)
- Asturian: blancu
- Atikamekw: wapaw
- Atong (India): pibok
- Aymara: janq’u
- Azerbaijani: ağ
- Bakhtiari: اسپید (espēð)
- Bambara: jèman
- Bashkir: аҡ (aq)
- Basque: zuri
- Belarusian: бе́лы (bjély)
- Bengali: সাদা (bn) (śada), সফেদ (bn) (śophed), সুফেদ (śuphed), ধলা (bn) (dhola)
- Bhojpuri: उज्जर (ujjar)
- Biatah Bidayuh: buda
- Bislama: waet
- Bouyei: haaul
- Breton: gwenn (br)
- Buginese: ma-pute
- Bulgarian: бял (bg) (bjal)
- Burmese: ဖြူ (my) (hpru), ဖွေး (my) (hpwe:)
- Buryat: сагаан (sagaan)
- Catalan: blanc (ca)
- Cebuano: puti, pution, duas (dirty white)
- Central Atlas Tamazight: ⴰⵎⵍⵍⴰⵍ m (amllal)
- Central Dusun: opurak
- Chagatai: آق (āq)
- Chamicuro: kamalawa
- Chechen: кӏай (kʼaj), кӏайн (kʼajn)
- Cherokee: ᎤᏁᎦ (unega)
- Chickasaw: tohbi’
- Chinese:
- Cantonese: 白 (baak6)
- Dungan: бый (bɨy)
- Mandarin: 白 (zh) (bái), 白色 (zh) (báisè)
- Min Dong: 白 (băh)
- Wu: 白 (baq)
- Chinook Jargon: tk’up
- Choctaw: tohbi
- Chukchi: иԓгыԓьын (iḷgyḷʹyn)
- Chuvash: шурӑ (šură)
- Classical Nahuatl: please add this translation if you can
- Cornish: gwynn, gwydn, kann (bright)
- Corsican: biancu (co)
- Czech: bílý (cs) m
- Dalmatian: jualb, blank
- Danish: hvid (da)
- Dogrib: degoo
- Dolgan: чээлкээ (çeelkee)
- Dutch: wit (nl)
- Elfdalian: wait
- Esperanto: blanka (eo)
- Estonian: valge (et)
- Even: нё̄бати (ņōʙati), гилтаня (giltaņa)
- Evenki: багдама (bagdama), багдарин (bagdarin)
- Faroese: hvítur (fo)
- Fijian: (please verify) vulavula
- Finnish: valkoinen (fi), valkea (fi)
- French: blanc (fr)
- Friulian: blanc
- Gagauz: ak
- Galician: branco (gl)
- Georgian: თეთრი (ka) (tetri)
- German: weiß (de), weiss (de) (Switzerland)
- Alemannic German: wiiss
- Old High German: wīz
- Gilbertese: mái
- Gorontalo: puti’o
- Gothic: 𐍈𐌴𐌹𐍄𐍃 (ƕeits)
- Greek: άσπρος (el) (áspros), λευκός (el) (lefkós)
- Ancient: λευκός (leukós)
- Mycenaean: 𐀩𐀄𐀏 (re-u-ka)
- Greenlandic: qaqortoq (kl)
- Gujarati: સફેદ (gu) (saphed)
- Haitian Creole: blan
- Hausa: feri
- Hawaiian: kea, keʻokeʻo
- Hebrew: לָבָן (he) (laván)
- Higaonon: maputi
- Hiligaynon: pution
- Hindi: सफ़ेद (safed)
- Hopi: qöötsa
- Hungarian: fehér (hu)
- Hunsrik: weis
- Icelandic: hvítur (is)
- Ido: blanka (io)
- Igbo: ọcha
- Indonesian: putih (id)
- Ingrian: valkia
- Ingush: кӏай (kʼaj)
- Interlingua: blanc (ia)
- Iranun: maputi
- Irish: bán (ga)
- Isnag: napusa
- Istriot: bianco
- Istro-Romanian: åb
- Italian: bianco (it)
- Japanese: 白い (ja) (しろい, shiroi), 白色の (ja) (はくしょくの, hakushoku no)
- Javanese: putih (jv), pethak (jv)
- K’iche’: saq
- Kabardian: хужь (xʷuź)
- Kabuverdianu: branku
- Kalmyk: цаһан (tsağan)
- Kamta: ধলা (dhola) / dhola
- Kannada: ಬಿಳಿ (kn) (biḷi)
- Kapampangan: maputi
- Karaim: акъ (aq), бийаз (biyaz)
- Karelian: valgei
- Kashaya: qahle
- Kashubian: biôłi
- Kaurna: parkana
- Kazakh: ақ (kk) (aq)
- Khakas: ах (ax)
- Khmer: ស (km) (sɑɑ)
- Khoekhoe: ǃuri
- Kongo: mpembe
- Korean: 희다 (ko) (huida) (predicative), 흰 (ko) (huin) (attributive), 하얗다 (ko) (hayata) (predicative), 하얀 (hayan) (attributive)
- Kurdish:
- Central Kurdish: سپی (ckb) (spî)
- Northern Kurdish: spî (ku), vebiye (ku)
- Kyrgyz: ак (ky) (ak)
- Lak: кӏяла (kʼaˤla)
- Lao: ຂາວ (lo) (khāo)
- Latgalian: bolts, boltons
- Latin: (flat/dull) albus (la), (shining) candidus (la)
- Latvian: balts m
- Lezgi: лацу (lacu)
- Ligurian: giànco
- Lingala: mpɛ́mbɛ́
- Lithuanian: baltas (lt)
- Lombard: bianch (lmo)
- Louisiana Creole French: blan
- Low German:
- German Low German: witt (nds)
- Luganda: yeru
- Luxembourgish: wäiss
- Lü: ᦃᦱᧁ (ẋaaw)
- Macedonian: бел (bel)
- Madurese: pote
- Maguindanao: maputi
- Makasar: kebo’
- Malagasy: tapotsiny (mg), fotsy (mg)
- Malay: putih (ms), puteh (ms), abiad (ms), abyad (ms)
- Jawi: ڤوتيه (ms), ابيض
- Malayalam: വെളുത്ത (ml) (veḷutta)
- Maltese: abjad (mt) m, bajda f, bojod pl
- Mambae: buti
- Manchu: ᡧᠠᠩᡤᡳᠶᠠᠨ (šanggiyan), ᡧᠠᠨᠶᠠᠨ (šanyan)
- Mansaka: mapoti
- Manx: bane
- Maori: tea (mi), maa
- Maranao: mapoti’
- Marathi: पांढरा (mr) (pāṇḍhrā)
- Mauritian Creole: blan
- Mazanderani: اسپه
- Mbyá Guaraní: xiĩ
- Megleno-Romanian: alb
- Meänkieli: valkea
- Minangkabau: putiah (min)
- Mirandese: branco
- Mon: ကၟု
- Mongolian:
- Cyrillic: цагаан (mn) (cagaan)
- Mongolian: ᠴᠠᠭᠠᠨ (čaɣan)
- Mòcheno: bais
- Nafaanra: finge
- Nahuatl: iztāc (nah)
- Nanai: чагдьан
- Navajo: łigai
- Neapolitan: janco
- Nepali: सेतो (ne) (seto)
- Ngarrindjeri: ringkari
- Ngazidja Comorian: -eu
- Nias: fusi
- Norman: blianc
- North Frisian:
- Föhr: witj
- Hallig, Mooring, Wiedingharde: wit
- Northern Sami: vielgat
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: hvit (no), kvit
- Nynorsk: kvit
- O’odham: toha
- Occitan: blanc (oc)
- Ojibwe: waabishki-, (inanimate verb, «it is red») waabishkaa, (animate verb, «he/she/it is red») waabishkizi
- Old Church Slavonic:
- Cyrillic: бѣлъ (bělŭ)
- Old Dutch: wīt
- Old English: hwīt
- Old French: blanc
- Old Frisian: hwīt
- Old Irish: bán, finn, gel
- Old Norse: hvítr
- Old Occitan: blanc
- Old Saxon: hwīt
- Old Turkic: 𐰇𐰼𐰭 (ür²ŋ /ürüŋ/), 𐰀𐰴 (aq /āq/)
- Oriya: ଧଳା (or) (dhôḷa)
- Oromo: adii (om)
- Ossetian: урс (urs)
- Ottoman Turkish: آق (ak), بیاض (beyaz)
- Pa’o Karen: ဗွာ
- Pangasinan: amputi
- Papiamentu: blanku
- Pashto: سپين (ps) (spin)
- Persian: سفید (fa) (sefid)
- Piedmontese: bianch
- Pipil: istak
- Pitjantjatjara: piṟanpa
- Plautdietsch: witt (nds)
- Polabian: b́olĕ
- Polish: biały (pl)
- Portuguese: branco (pt)
- Punjabi: ਸਫੈਦ (pa) (saphaid)
- Quechua: yuraq
- Rajasthani: please add this translation if you can
- Rapa Nui: tea tea
- Rohingya: cáda, dóla
- Romani: parno
- Romanian: alb (ro)
- Romansch: alv
- Russian: бе́лый (ru) (bélyj)
- Rusyn: білый (bilŷj)
- S’gaw Karen: ဝါ (wah)
- Saek: ห่าว
- Samoan: paʔepaʔe, sina, tea
- Sanskrit: श्वेत (sa) (śveta), धवल (sa) (dhavala)
- Santali: ᱯᱳᱱᱰ (ponḍ)
- Sardinian: abru, arvu, arbu, alvu, àrbiu
- Sasak: putiq
- Scottish Gaelic: geal
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: бе̏о, бије̑л, би̏о, бе̑л
- Roman: bȅo (sh), bijȇl (sh), bȉo (sh), bȇl (sh)
- Seychellois Creole: blan
- Shan: ၶၢဝ် (shn) (khǎao)
- Sherpa: དཀར་རུ (dkar ru)
- Shona: chena
- Shor: ақ (aq)
- Sicilian: jancu (scn), biancu (scn), vrancu (scn), viancu (scn), iancu (scn), brancu (scn)
- Sindhi: اڇو (ačʰo)
- Sinhalese: සුදු (si) (sudu)
- Slovak: biely (sk)
- Slovene: bel (sl)
- Somali: caddaan
- Sorbian:
- Lower Sorbian: běły, běły
- Upper Sorbian: běły (hsb)
- Southern Altai: ак (ak)
- Spanish: blanco (es)
- Sundanese: bodas (su)
- Swahili: -eupe
- Swazi: mhlôphe
- Swedish: vit (sv)
- Tagalog: puti (tl), putiq
- Tahitian: ʻuoʻuo
- Tai Dam: ꪄꪱꪫ
- Tai Nüa: ᥑᥣᥝᥴ (xáaw)
- Tajik: сафед (tg) (safed)
- Tamil: வெள் (ta) (veḷ)
- Tashelhit: ⴰⵎⵍⵍⴰⵍ m (amllal), ⵓⵎⵍⵉⵍ m (umlil)
- Tarantino: vianche
- Tatar: ак (aq)
- Tausug: puti
- Telugu: తెల్లని (te) (tellani)
- Tetum: mutin
- Thai: ขาว (th) (kǎao)
- Tibetan: དཀར་པོ (dkar po)
- Tocharian A: ārki
- Tocharian B: ārkwi
- Tok Pisin: waitpela
- Tongan: hinehina
- Tsonga: basa (ts)
- Tswana: sweu
- Turkish: ak (tr), beyaz (tr)
- Turkmen: ak (tk)
- Tuvaluan: tea
- Tuvan: ак (ak)
- Tày: khao
- Ugaritic: 𐎍𐎁𐎐 (lbn)
- Ukrainian: бі́лий (uk) (bílyj)
- Umbrian: 𐌀𐌋𐌚𐌖 (alfu)
- Urdu: سفید (safed)
- Uyghur: ئاق (ug) (aq)
- Uzbek: oq (uz)
- Venetian: bianco (vec), bianch
- Vietnamese: trắng, (compounds) bạch (白)
- Volapük: vietik
- Votic: valka
- Wakhi: ruxn
- Walloon: blanc (wa)
- Welsh: gwyn m, gwen f
- West Frisian: wyt
- Western Bukidnon Manobo: puti’
- White Hmong: dawb
- Wolof: yèes-xonq
- Written Oirat: ᡔᠠᡎᠠᠨ (caɣan)
- Xhosa: mhlophe
- Yagnobi: сафед (safed)
- Yakut: үрүҥ (ürüñ)
- Yiddish: ווײַס (vays)
- Yoruba: funfun
- Zazaki: sıpe m or m pl, sıpi f
- Zealandic: wit
- Zhuang: hau
- Zulu: -mhlophe
Recent Examples on the Web
More white people claim the credit than Black people certainly.
—Tax Notes Staff, Forbes, 14 Feb. 2023
Black people make up about 14% of the U.S. population but are three times more likely to face hunger than white people, according to the Agriculture Department.
—Maya Eaglin, NBC News, 11 Feb. 2023
The only racial group that saw a decrease in suicide rates across age cohorts was non-Hispanic white people.
—Ellen Barry, New York Times, 11 Feb. 2023
The only racial group that saw a decrease in suicide rates across age cohorts was non-Hispanic white people.
—Ellen Barry, BostonGlobe.com, 11 Feb. 2023
Since 2005, the homeownership rate for white people in metro Atlanta has hovered between 73% and 80%.
—Zachary Hansen, ajc, 9 Feb. 2023
Here the racial inequality is stark, with Black people being nearly three times more likely to die from childbirth as white people, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
—Allison Parshall, Scientific American, 9 Feb. 2023
Across ethnic groups the support of gun control legislation saw broad support, with 86 percent of Black people, 82 percent of Latino people and 77 percent of white people in favor of the age change.
—Kennedy Sessions, Chron, 8 Feb. 2023
Some in Milwaukee took it as Abdul-Jabbar not liking white people.
—Los Angeles Times, 8 Feb. 2023
Tones switch from golden or white-based to brassy or orange.
—Margaux Anbouba, ELLE, 4 Apr. 2023
Choose from three neutral colors: light gray, cashew and white. 8 Homesick Let’s Toast Candle $33 at Amazon$38 at Bloomingdale’s Fill their home with a sweet scent and a celebratory message that reminds them to toast.
—Alyssa Gautieri, Good Housekeeping, 31 Mar. 2023
In this living room, the natural material is a soft counterpoint to glam metallics, cool whites, and beiges.
—Caitlin Sole, Better Homes & Gardens, 27 Mar. 2023
The Rangers opted to keep their home whites, road grays, royal blue tops and their powder blue Sunday uniforms.
—Evan Grant, Dallas News, 27 Mar. 2023
Eating for an active lifestyle doesn’t have to be just chicken breast and egg whites, and Rizzo’s book is proof.
—Abigail Abesamis Demarest, Forbes, 27 Mar. 2023
The flowers are large, pure white and several to a stalk.
—Tom Maccubbin, Orlando Sentinel, 25 Mar. 2023
Threadmill Cotton Queen Sheet Set The Island Palms collection brings in deliciously tropical details like warm, sunny yellows and crisp whites.
—Brittany Vanderbill, Travel + Leisure, 21 Mar. 2023
The meeting of the classic and the contemporary, and the attention to detail that is present chez Melbostad is also at play in the designer’s debut collection of unisex separates in a muted palette of whites, grays, khaki, and black.
—Laird Borrelli-persson, Vogue, 21 Mar. 2023
The waters here abound with tuna, pompano, catfish, flounder, and whiting, and many local restaurants serve the freshest seafood.
—Dobrina Zhekova, Travel + Leisure, 21 Mar. 2023
The higher the cars crept, the thicker the fog became, whiting out the landscape.
—Jo Rodgers, Condé Nast Traveler, 21 Feb. 2023
Ars Technica has opted to white out this dialogue bubble.
—Sam Machkovech, Ars Technica, 24 Aug. 2022
How can white people in the dance scene be better allies?
—Katie Bain, Billboard, 12 Nov. 2020
See More
These examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word ‘white.’ Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
- Top Definitions
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- British
- Idioms And Phrases
This shows grade level based on the word’s complexity.
[ wahyt, hwahyt ]
/ waɪt, ʰwaɪt /
This shows grade level based on the word’s complexity.
adjective, whit·er, whit·est.
of the color of pure snow, of the margins of this page, etc.; reflecting nearly all the rays of sunlight or a similar light.
light or comparatively light in color.
(of human beings) belonging to a group marked by slight pigmentation of the skin, often of European descent.
for, limited to, or predominantly made up of white people: a white neighborhood.
pallid or pale, as from fear or other strong emotion: white with rage.
silvery, gray, or hoary: white hair.
snowy: a white Christmas.
lacking color; transparent.
blank, as an unoccupied space in printed matter: Fill in the white space below.
Also called al·wite [awl-wahyt] /ˈɔl waɪt/ .Armor. composed entirely of polished steel plates without fabric or other covering.
wearing white clothing: a white monk.
Older Use: Offensive. decent, honorable, or dependable: That’s mighty white of you.
auspicious or fortunate.
morally pure; innocent.
without malice; harmless: white magic.
(of wines) light-colored or yellowish, as opposed to red.
refined or processed, as flour.
British. (of coffee) containing milk.
noun
a color without hue at one extreme end of the scale of grays, opposite to black. A white surface reflects light of all hues completely and diffusely. Most so-called whites are very light grays: fresh snow, for example, reflects about 80 percent of the incident light, but to be strictly white, snow would have to reflect 100 percent of the incident light. It is the ultimate limit of a series of shades of any color.Compare black (def. 19).
a hue completely desaturated by admixture with white, the highest value possible.
quality or state of being white.
lightness of skin pigment.
a person with light-colored skin, often of European descent.
a white material or substance.
the white part of something.
Biology. a pellucid viscous fluid that surrounds the yolk of an egg; albumen.
the white part of the eyeball: He has a speck in the white of his eye.
whites,
- white or nearly white clothing, as in tennis whites.
- top-grade white flour.
white wine: Graves is a good white.
a type or breed that is white in color.
Usually whites. a blank space in printing.
White. a hog of any of several breeds having a white coat, as a Chester White.
Entomology. any of several white-winged butterflies of the family Pieridae, as the common cabbage butterflies.
white fabric.
Archery.
- the outermost ring of the butt.
- an arrow that hits this portion of the butt.
- the central part of the butt or target, formerly painted white but now painted gold or yellow.
- Archaic. a target painted white.
Chess, Checkers. the men or pieces that are light-colored.
Often White . a member of a royalist, conservative, or reactionary political party.
verb (used with object), whit·ed, whit·ing.
Printing.
- to make white by leaving blank spaces (often followed by out).
- to whiten (areas of artwork) in retouching preparatory to photoengraving (often followed by out).
Archaic. to make white; whiten.
Verb Phrases
white out,
- to cover (errors in copy) with a white correction fluid.
- to censor, as by obliterating words or passages with white ink.
QUIZ
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Which sentence is correct?
Idioms about white
bleed white, Informal. to be or cause to be deprived of all one’s resources: Dishonesty is bleeding the union white.
in the white, in an unfinished state or condition, as furniture wood that has not been stained or varnished.
Origin of white
First recorded before 900; Middle English whit(e), Old English hwīt; cognate with German weiss, Old Norse hvītr, Gothic hweits; akin to wheat
OTHER WORDS FROM white
half-white, adjectiveun·white, adjective
Words nearby white
whit, Whitaker, Whitbread, Whitby, Whitchurch-Stouffville, white, whiteacre, white admiral, white alder, white alert, white alkali
Other definitions for white (2 of 2)
White
[ wahyt, hwahyt ]
/ waɪt, ʰwaɪt /
noun
Andrew Dickson, 1832–1918, U.S. diplomat and pioneer of land-grant education.
Byron R(aymond) «Whizzer», 1917–2002, U.S. lawyer and jurist: associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court 1962–93.
Edmund, born 1940, U.S. novelist.
Edward Douglass, 1845–1921, U.S. jurist: chief justice of the U.S. 1910–21.
Edward H(ig·gins), II [hig-inz], /ˈhɪg ɪnz/, 1930–67, U.S. astronaut: first American to walk in space 1965.
E(l·wyn) B(rooks) [el-win], /ˈɛl wɪn/, 1899–1985, U.S. humorist and poet.
George Leonard, 1838–95, U.S. choral conductor.
Gilbert, 1720–93, English clergyman, naturalist, and writer.
Patrick (Victor Mar·tin·dale) [mahr-tn-deyl], /ˈmɑr tnˌdeɪl/, 1912–90, Australian writer, born in England: Nobel Prize 1973.
Stanford, 1853–1906, U.S. architect.
Stewart Edward, 1873–1946, U.S. novelist.
T(erence) H(an·bur·y) [han-buh-ree], /ˈhæn bə ri/, 1896–1964, English novelist.
Theodore H., 1915–86, U.S. journalist and writer.
Walter Francis, 1893–1955, U.S. civil rights leader and writer: executive secretary of the NAACP 1931–55.
William A(l·an·son) [al—uhn-suhn], /ˈæl ən sən/, 1870–1937, U.S. neurologist, psychiatrist, and writer.
William Allen, 1868–1944, U.S. journalist.
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Words related to white
alabaster, ashen, blanched, bleached, cadaverous, doughy, pale, pallid, pasty, fair, ivory, light, pearly, sallow, waxy, achromatic, achromic, anemic, bloodless, chalky
How to use white in a sentence
-
The breakdown of the 114th Congress is 80 percent white, 80 percent male, and 92 percent Christian.
-
If Congress accurately reflected our nation on the basis of race, about 63 percent would be white, not 80 percent.
-
There were rumors of shrieks and flashes emanating from the well, and reports of a figure in white.
-
The FBI raided his home in 2000 with an affidavit questioning his use of $200,000 from his white supremacist fundraising.
-
But after winning 55 percent of the white vote, Duke had a database of supporters some politicians coveted.
-
And she would be wearing some of the jewels with the white dress—just a few, not many, of course.
-
None other would dare to show herself unveiled to a stranger, and a white man at that.
-
One would not have wanted her white neck a mite less full or her beautiful arms more slender.
-
That evening in the gondola, with one old and two newer friends, is marked with a white stone in my recollection.
-
Why not have sought out the pure white lime-rocks of the flat country, or the grey granite of the hills?
British Dictionary definitions for white (1 of 3)
adjective
having no hue due to the reflection of all or almost all incident lightCompare black (def. 1)
(of light, such as sunlight) consisting of all the colours of the spectrum or produced by certain mixtures of three additive primary colours, such as red, green, and blue
comparatively white or whitish-grey in colour or having parts of this colourwhite clover
(of an animal) having pale-coloured or white skin, fur, or feathers
bloodless or pale, as from pain, emotion, etc
(of hair, a beard, etc) silvery or grey, usually from age
benevolent or without malicious intentwhite magic
colourless or transparentwhite glass
capped with or accompanied by snowa white Christmas
(sometimes capital) counterrevolutionary, very conservative, or royalistCompare Red (def. 2)
blank, as an unprinted area of a page
(of wine) made from pale grapes or from black grapes separated from their skins
- (of coffee or tea) with milk or cream
- (of bread) made with white flour
physics having or characterized by a continuous distribution of energy, wavelength, or frequencywhite noise
informal honourable or generous
(of armour) made completely of iron or steel (esp in the phrase white harness)
rare morally unblemished
rare (of times, seasons, etc) auspicious; favourable
poetic, or archaic having a fair complexion; blond
bleed white to deprive slowly of resources
whiter than white
- extremely clean and white
- informal very pure, honest, and moral
noun
a white colour
the condition or quality of being white; whiteness
the white or lightly coloured part or area of something
the white the viscous fluid that surrounds the yolk of a bird’s egg, esp a hen’s egg; albumen
anatomy the white part (sclera) of the eyeball
chess draughts
- a white or light-coloured piece or square
- (usually capital) the player playing with such pieces
anything that has or is characterized by a white colour, such as a white paint or pigment, a white cloth, a white ball in billiards
an unprinted area of a page
archery
- the outer ring of the target, having the lowest score
- a shot or arrow hitting this ring
poetic fairness of complexion
in the white (of wood or furniture) left unpainted or unvarnished
verb
(usually foll by out) to create or leave white spaces in (printed or other matter)
obsolete to make or become white
Derived forms of white
whitely, adverbwhiteness, nounwhitish, adjective
Word Origin for white
Old English hwīt; related to Old Frisian hwīt, Old Saxon hwīt, Old Norse hvītr, Gothic hveits, Old High German hwīz (German weiss)
British Dictionary definitions for white (2 of 3)
noun
a person, esp one of European ancestry, from a human population having light pigmentation of the skin
adjective
denoting or relating to a White person or White people
British Dictionary definitions for white (3 of 3)
noun
Gilbert. 1720–93, English clergyman and naturalist, noted for his Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne (1789)
Jimmy. born 1962, English snooker player
Marco Pierre. born 1961, British chef and restaurateur
Patrick (Victor Martindale). 1912–90, Australian novelist: his works include Voss (1957), The Eye of the Storm (1973), and A Fringe of Leaves (1976): Nobel prize for literature 1973
T (erence) H (anbury). 1906–64, British novelist: author of the Arthurian sequence The Once and Future King (1939–58)
Willard (Wentworth) (ˈwɪlɑːd). born 1946, British operatic bass, born in Jamaica
Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition
© William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins
Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
Other Idioms and Phrases with white
In addition to the idioms beginning with white
- white as a sheet
- white elephant
- white feather
- white flag, show the
- white lie
- white sale
also see:
- black and white
- bleed someone white
- great white hope
- show the white feather
The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary
Copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
Definition of white (Entry 1 of 3) 1a : having the color of new snow or milk specifically : of the color white (see white entry 2 sense 1) white socks a white rabbit. b : light or pale in color white hair white wine lips white with fear.
Is white an adjective or noun?
white (adjective) white (noun) white–bread (adjective)
What words describe white?
white
- alabaster.
- ashen.
- blanched.
- bleached.
- cadaverous.
- doughy.
- pale.
- pallid.
white adjective, noun [C/U] (COLOR)
Is white a color?
Some consider white to be a color, because white light comprises all hues on the visible light spectrum. And many do consider black to be a color, because you combine other pigments to create it on paper. But in a technical sense, black and white are not colors, they’re shades.
What is the original meaning of white?
morally pure
As a surname, originally with reference to fair hair or complexion, it is one of the oldest in English, being well-established before the Conquest. Meaning “morally pure” was in Old English.
What is the verb for white?
whiten. (ergative) (To cause) to become white or whiter; to bleach or blanch.
What are synonyms for white people?
White People synonyms
- Caucasian race. a light-skinned race.
- white race. (Loosely) The Caucasoid group of mankind.
- Caucasoid race. a light-skinned race.
How do you say white in other languages?
In other languages White
- American English: white /ˈwaɪt/
- Arabic: أَبْيَض
- Brazilian Portuguese: branco.
- Chinese: 白的
- Croatian: bijeli.
- Czech: bílý
- Danish: hvid.
- Dutch: wit.
What code is white?
#FFFFFF
RGB color table
HTML / CSS Name | Hex Code #RRGGBB | Decimal Code (R,G,B) |
---|---|---|
White | #FFFFFF | (255,255,255) |
Red | #FF0000 | (255,0,0) |
Lime | #00FF00 | (0,255,0) |
Blue | #0000FF | (0,0,255) |
Is black actually a color?
Black is a color which results from the absence or complete absorption of visible light. It is an achromatic color, without hue, like white and gray.
What is white in nature?
Snow: Snow appears to be white because of the light that is scattered and bounces off the ice crystals in it. This light, which includes all colors, when reflected looks white. In fact, snow is translucent.
What is white in art?
The Color White Representing Purity, Innocence and Goodness.
What does B mean in text?
B is a letter, yes, but it’s also a shortening of several words: brother, babe, bae, boo … you get the point.
What colour makes white?
By convention, the three primary colors in additive mixing are red, green, and blue. In the absence of light of any color, the result is black. If all three primary colors of light are mixed in equal proportions, the result is neutral (gray or white).
What word can I use instead of Caucasian?
The word caucasian stems from outdated racial science; “white” is preferable.
How do you describe pale skin?
Paleness, also known as pallor, is an unusual lightness of skin color compared with your normal complexion. It’s different than having skin that’s naturally light. Paleness is not a condition in and of itself. It may be caused by reduced blood flow and oxygen or by a decreased number of red blood cells.
Whats the opposite of minority?
If you’re left-handed, you are in the minority, because most people are right-handed. That means that right-handed people are the majority (the opposite of minority).
What is the Korean word for White?
hayansaek
How to Pronounce the Colors in Korean
Colors in English | Colors in Korean | Hangeul Pronunciation |
---|---|---|
red | 빨간색 (ppalkansaek) | [빨간색] |
silver | 은색 (eunsaek) | [은색] |
white | 하얀색 (hayansaek) | [하얀색] |
yellow | 노란색 (noransaek) | [노란색] |
How do you say ghost in different languages?
In other languages ghost
- American English: ghost /ˈgoʊst/
- Arabic: شَبَح
- Brazilian Portuguese: fantasma.
- Chinese: 鬼
- Croatian: duh.
- Czech: duch.
- Danish: spøgelse.
- Dutch: spook.
What color is 255?
Some Common Colors
Color | Decimal (Red, Green, Blue) | Hexadecimal (#RRGGBB) |
---|---|---|
Red | (255, 0, 0) | #FF0000 |
Green | (0,255, 0) | #00FF00 |
Blue | (0, 0,255) | #0000FF |
Yellow | (255,255, 0) | #FFFF00 |
white
(wīt, hwīt)
n.
1. The achromatic color of maximum lightness; the color of objects that reflect nearly all light of all visible wavelengths; the complement or antagonist of black, the other extreme of the neutral gray series. Although typically a response to maximum stimulation of the retina, the perception of white appears always to depend on contrast.
2. The white or nearly white part, as:
a. The albumen of an egg.
b. The white part of an eyeball.
c. A blank or unprinted area, as of an advertisement.
3. One that is white or nearly white, as:
a. whites Pieces of laundry having a white or nearly white color.
b. whites White pants or a white outfit of a special nature: tennis whites.
c. whites The white dress uniform of the US Navy or Coast Guard.
d. A white wine.
e. A white pigment.
f. A white breed, species, or variety of animal.
g. Any of various butterflies of the subfamily Pierinae, characteristically having chiefly white wings often with black markings.
h. also White A member of a racial group having light-colored skin, especially when of European origin and in some classifications also when of Middle Eastern or North African origin.
i. often whites Products of a white color, such as flour, salt, and sugar.
4. Games
a. The white or light-colored pieces, as in chess.
b. The player using these pieces.
5.
a. The outermost ring of an archery target.
b. A hit in this ring.
6. whites Medicine Leukorrhea.
7. White A member of a conservative or counterrevolutionary faction, especially one opposing the Bolsheviks in the Russian civil war.
adj. whit·er, whit·est
1. Being of the color white; devoid of hue, as new snow.
2. Approaching the color white, as:
a. Weakly colored; almost colorless; pale: white wine.
b. Pale gray; silvery and lustrous: white hair.
c. Bloodless; blanched.
3. Light or whitish in color or having light or whitish parts. Used with animal and plant names.
4. also White Of or belonging to a racial group of people having light-colored skin, especially when of European origin, and in some classifications also when of Middle Eastern or North African origin: voting patterns within the white population.
5. Habited in white: white nuns.
6. Accompanied by or mantled with snow: a white Christmas.
7.
a. Incandescent: white flames.
b. Intensely heated; impassioned: white with fury.
8. White Of or relating to a conservative or counterrevolutionary faction, especially one opposing the Bolsheviks in the Russian civil war.
9. With milk added. Used of tea or coffee.
10. Archaic Unsullied; pure.
tr.v. whit·ed, whit·ing, whites
Printing To cover or make illegible with white coloring. Often used with out.
white′ness n.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
white
(waɪt)
adj
1. (Colours) having no hue due to the reflection of all or almost all incident light. Compare black1
2. (General Physics) (of light, such as sunlight) consisting of all the colours of the spectrum or produced by certain mixtures of three additive primary colours, such as red, green, and blue
3. (Colours) comparatively white or whitish-grey in colour or having parts of this colour: white clover.
4. (Zoology) (of an animal) having pale-coloured or white skin, fur, or feathers
5. (Physiology) bloodless or pale, as from pain, emotion, etc
6. (Hairdressing & Grooming) (of hair, a beard, etc) silvery or grey, usually from age
7. benevolent or without malicious intent: white magic.
8. (Colours) colourless or transparent: white glass.
9. capped with or accompanied by snow: a white Christmas.
10. (Government, Politics & Diplomacy) (sometimes capital) counterrevolutionary, very conservative, or royalist. Compare Red2
11. (Printing, Lithography & Bookbinding) blank, as an unprinted area of a page
12. (Brewing) (of wine) made from pale grapes or from black grapes separated from their skins
13. (Cookery)
a. (of coffee or tea) with milk or cream
b. (of bread) made with white flour
14. (General Physics) physics having or characterized by a continuous distribution of energy, wavelength, or frequency: white noise.
15. informal honourable or generous
16. (Arms & Armour (excluding Firearms)) (of armour) made completely of iron or steel (esp in the phrase white harness)
17. rare morally unblemished
18. rare (of times, seasons, etc) auspicious; favourable
19. poetic or archaic having a fair complexion; blond
20. bleed white to deprive slowly of resources
21. whiter than white
a. extremely clean and white
b. informal very pure, honest, and moral
n
22. (Colours) a white colour
23. (Colours) the condition or quality of being white; whiteness
24. (Colours) the white or lightly coloured part or area of something
25. (Zoology) the white the viscous fluid that surrounds the yolk of a bird’s egg, esp a hen’s egg; albumen
26. (Anatomy) anatomy the white part (sclera) of the eyeball
28. (Chess & Draughts) chess draughts
a. a white or light-coloured piece or square
b. (usually capital) the player playing with such pieces
29. (Colours) anything that has or is characterized by a white colour, such as a white paint or pigment, a white cloth, a white ball in billiards
30. (Printing, Lithography & Bookbinding) an unprinted area of a page
31. (Archery) archery
a. the outer ring of the target, having the lowest score
b. a shot or arrow hitting this ring
32. (Poetry) poetic fairness of complexion
33. (Furniture) in the white (of wood or furniture) left unpainted or unvarnished
34. (Forestry) in the white (of wood or furniture) left unpainted or unvarnished
vb
35. (Printing, Lithography & Bookbinding) (usually foll by out) to create or leave white spaces in (printed or other matter)
36. obsolete to make or become white
[Old English hwīt; related to Old Frisian hwīt, Old Saxon hwīt, Old Norse hvītr, Gothic hveits, Old High German hwīz (German weiss)]
ˈwhitely adv
ˈwhiteness n
ˈwhitish adj
ˈwhitishness n
White
(waɪt)
n
(Peoples) a person, esp one of European ancestry, from a human population having light pigmentation of the skin
adj
(Peoples) denoting or relating to a White person or White people
White
(waɪt)
n
1. (Biography) Gilbert. 1720–93, English clergyman and naturalist, noted for his Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne (1789)
2. (Biography) Jimmy. born 1962, English snooker player
3. (Biography) Marco Pierre. born 1961, British chef and restaurateur
4. (Biography) Patrick (Victor Martindale). 1912–90, Australian novelist: his works include Voss (1957), The Eye of the Storm (1973), and A Fringe of Leaves (1976): Nobel prize for literature 1973
5. (Biography) T(erence) H(anbury). 1906–64, British novelist: author of the Arthurian sequence The Once and Future King (1939–58)
6. (Biography) Willard (Wentworth) (ˈwɪlɑːd). born 1946, British operatic bass, born in Jamaica
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
white
(ʰwaɪt, waɪt)
adj. whit•er, whit•est, adj.
1. of the color of pure snow; reflecting nearly all the rays of sunlight or a similar light.
2. light or comparatively light in color.
3. marked by slight pigmentation of the skin.
4. for, limited to, or predominantly made up of persons whose racial heritage is Caucasian: a white neighborhood.
5. pallid or pale, as from fear or other strong emotion.
6. silvery; gray: white hair.
7. snowy: a white Christmas.
8. lacking color; transparent.
9. politically conservative or reactionary.
10. blank, as part of a page.
11. lustrously shiny: a knight in white armor.
12. wearing white clothing: a white monk.
13. auspicious; fortunate.
14. morally pure; innocent.
15. lacking malice; harmless: white magic.
16. (of wine) light-colored or yellowish.
n.
17. a color without hue at one extreme end of the scale of grays, opposite to black, that reflects light of all hues completely and diffusely.
18. a hue completely desaturated by admixture with white.
19. quality or state of being white.
20. lightness of skin pigment.
21. a person whose racial heritage is Caucasian.
22. a white material or substance.
23. the white part of something.
24. a pellucid, viscous fluid that surrounds the yolk of an egg; albumen.
25. the white part of the eyeball.
26. whites,
a. white or nearly white clothing.
b. top-grade white flour.
27. white wine.
28. a type or breed that is white in color.
29. (cap.) a hog of any of several breeds having a white coat, as a Chester White.
30.
a. the outermost ring of a target.
b. an arrow that hits this portion of the target.
c. the central part of the target, formerly painted white but now painted gold or yellow.
d. Archaic. a white target.
31. the pieces in chess or checkers that are light-colored.
32. (often cap.) a member of a royalist, conservative, or reactionary political party.
v.t.
33. to make white; whiten.
34. white out, to cover (errors in copy) with a white correction fluid.
Idioms:
bleed white, to deprive of all resources: Corruption bled the country white.
[before 900; Middle English whit(e), Old English hwīt, c. Old Frisian, Old Saxon hwīt, Old High German (h)wīz, Old Norse hvītr, Gothic hweits]
White
(ʰwaɪt, waɪt)
n.
1. Edmund, born 1940, U.S. novelist.
2. Edward Douglass, 1845–1921, Chief Justice of the U.S. 1910–21.
3. Edward H(iggins), II, 1930–67, U.S. astronaut: first American to walk in space 1965.
4. E(lwyn) B(rooks), 1899–1985, U.S. humorist and poet.
5. Patrick (Victor Martindale), 1912–90, Australian writer: Nobel prize 1973.
6. Stanford, 1853–1906, U.S. architect.
7. T(erence) H(anbury), 1896–1964, English novelist, born in India.
8. Theodore H., 1915–86, U.S. journalist and writer.
9. William Allen, 1868–1944, U.S. journalist.
Random House Kernerman Webster’s College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.
White
See Also: COLORS, COMPLEXION, PALLOR
- (Face) more white than sin —Dame Edith Sitwell
- Pure white as china door knobs —Reynolds Price
- White and bare as a winter moon —George Garrett
- White and clean as driftwood —George Garrett
See Also: CLEANLINESS
- (A yacht) white and pretty as a birthday cake —George Garrett
See Also: BEAUTY
- White and wan, like the head and skin of a dying man —Percy Bysshe Shelley
- (The desert is) white as a blind man’s eye —Sylvia Plath
- (He’s as) white as a chicken —Honore de Balzac
- (Face) white as a bandage —Helen Hudson
- White as a dog’s bone —Anne Sexton
- White as a foam-flower —Henry Van Dyke
- (Ball) white as a leghorn egg —W. P. Kinsella
- White as a lily —William Shakespeare
- (In marble halls as) white as milk —Anon old English riddle
Some variations to intensify the image: “White as new milk” by Dorothy Canfield Fisher and “Snow white as white milk from a white cow” by Eleanor Wylie.
- White as a milk tooth —Charles Simic
- (Body) white as an aspirin —Richard Ford
- White as any bough that blooms in May —Geoffrey Chaucer
- White as a peeled stick —Helen Hudson
- (Moon) white as a sand dollar —Diane Ackerman
- White as blanched almonds —Charles Cotton
- (Teeth) white as detergent —Margaret Atwood
- White as ermine —Dame Edith Sitwell
- (Her neck and temples were) white as flour —T. Coraghessan Boyle
- White as frost —G. K. Chesterton
An extension of this opening line of Chesterton’s poem, The Mirror of Madmen, is “White as hoarfrost.”
- White as ivory —Oscar Wilde
An extension by a contemporary short story writer, Barry Targan: “White as polished ivory.”
- White as lightning —Cynthia Ozick
The comparison is being used to describe the look of a woman in a nurse’s uniform.
- (The air blew white in my face,) white as my daughter’s communion dress, white as a bridal veil —Elizabeth Spencer
- (The little space between earth and sky was filled by a broken veil of drifting flakes as) white as pear blossoms —Phyllis Bottome
- (Teeth,) white as peeled almonds —Gerald Kersh
- (Veins) white as porkfat —Sylvia Plath
- White as pulverized bone —T. Coraghessan Boyle
- White as rice —Reynolds Price
- White as sheets and blizzards —T. Coraghessan Boyle
- White as snow —The Holy Bible
Similes comparing the whiteness of complexions, hair and miscellaneous objects to snow can be found throughout literature as well as in our everyday language. Some well-known variations include: “White as driven snow” by William Shakespeare, “White as new-fallen snow” by William Wordsworth, “White as dead snow” by Algernon Charles Swinburne and “White as the snow on high hills” by Elizabeth Barrett Browning.
- (Teeth) white as sun-cured bone —Beryl Markham
- (Hand) white as talcum —Mavis Gallant
- (Teeth) white as the petals of a daisy —Dan Jacobson
- White as the sun —Henry Chettle
- White as the surf —Oscar Wilde
- (Face is) white as the wall —Daphne du Maurier
- (Chest … ) white as wax —Patricia Henley
- (Hair) white as whipped cream —W. P. Kinsella
- (Face) white like a whitewashed fence —William Faulkner
- White like May-blossom —Charlotte Bronte
- White like salt —Aharon Megged
- White like sea foam —Joan Chase
Similes Dictionary, 1st Edition. © 1988 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
white
Past participle: whited
Gerund: whiting
Imperative |
---|
white |
white |
Present |
---|
I white |
you white |
he/she/it whites |
we white |
you white |
they white |
Preterite |
---|
I whited |
you whited |
he/she/it whited |
we whited |
you whited |
they whited |
Present Continuous |
---|
I am whiting |
you are whiting |
he/she/it is whiting |
we are whiting |
you are whiting |
they are whiting |
Present Perfect |
---|
I have whited |
you have whited |
he/she/it has whited |
we have whited |
you have whited |
they have whited |
Past Continuous |
---|
I was whiting |
you were whiting |
he/she/it was whiting |
we were whiting |
you were whiting |
they were whiting |
Past Perfect |
---|
I had whited |
you had whited |
he/she/it had whited |
we had whited |
you had whited |
they had whited |
Future |
---|
I will white |
you will white |
he/she/it will white |
we will white |
you will white |
they will white |
Future Perfect |
---|
I will have whited |
you will have whited |
he/she/it will have whited |
we will have whited |
you will have whited |
they will have whited |
Future Continuous |
---|
I will be whiting |
you will be whiting |
he/she/it will be whiting |
we will be whiting |
you will be whiting |
they will be whiting |
Present Perfect Continuous |
---|
I have been whiting |
you have been whiting |
he/she/it has been whiting |
we have been whiting |
you have been whiting |
they have been whiting |
Future Perfect Continuous |
---|
I will have been whiting |
you will have been whiting |
he/she/it will have been whiting |
we will have been whiting |
you will have been whiting |
they will have been whiting |
Past Perfect Continuous |
---|
I had been whiting |
you had been whiting |
he/she/it had been whiting |
we had been whiting |
you had been whiting |
they had been whiting |
Conditional |
---|
I would white |
you would white |
he/she/it would white |
we would white |
you would white |
they would white |
Past Conditional |
---|
I would have whited |
you would have whited |
he/she/it would have whited |
we would have whited |
you would have whited |
they would have whited |
Collins English Verb Tables © HarperCollins Publishers 2011
Translations
wit
أَبْيَضأبْيَض البَشَرَهأبْيَض اللوْنالإنْسان الأبْيَضاللون الأبْيَض
бялбяло
blanc
bílýbělochběloškabílábílek
hvidhvidemed flødemed mælkbleg
blankablanko
valge
valkoinenvalkeavalkoihoinen
सफ़ेद
bijelbijelabijelibio
fehérszeme fehérjetojásfehérje
blanc
buleorang kulit putihputih
hvíturhvítur liturhvítur maîurmjólkurbætturnáfölur
白い
흰
albaalbumalbuscandidus
baltabaltasbaltintasbaltintibaltumas
baltaisbaltsbaltumsnobālisar pienu
alb
bielybeľmobelochbiela farbabielok
belbelabelcibeljakbelopolt
белабелацбелкиња
vitvitt
สีขาวผิวขาว
beyazakbenzi atmışbeyaz ırktan olan kimsebeyaz renk
trắngbạch
white
[waɪt]
A. ADJ (whiter (compar) (whitest (superl)))
B. N
2. (= white person) → blanco/a m/f
3. (also white wine) → blanco m
a glass of white → un blanco
4. [of egg] → clara f
Collins Spanish Dictionary — Complete and Unabridged 8th Edition 2005 © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1971, 1988 © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2005
white
[ˈhwaɪt]
adj → blanc(blanche)
He’s got white hair → Il a les cheveux blancs.
a white shirt → une chemise blanche
fluffy white clouds → de blancs nuages moutonneux
the land of the long white cloud → le pays du long nuage blanc
to turn white [hair] → blanchir
to paint sth white → peindre qch en blanc
(= refined) [flour, bread, pasta, rice] → blanc(blanche); [sugar] → blanc(blanche)
a white loaf → une miche de pain blanc
white coffee → café au lait
Would you like your coffee black or white? — White, please → Vous voulez votre café noir ou avec du lait? — Avec du lait, s’il vous plaît.
(= Caucasian) → blanc(blanche)
a white man → un Blanc
a white woman → une Blanche
white people → les Blancs
(= pale) [face, cheeks] → pâle
as white as a sheet, as white as a ghost → pâle comme un linge
Her face was as white as a sheet → Elle était pâle comme un linge.
to turn white, to go white → pâlir, blêmir
Richard had turned very white, but he continued → Richard était devenu très pâle mais il continua.
n
(= person) → Blanc (Blanche)m/f → blanc (blanche)m/f
[egg] → blanc m whites
npl
(= washing) → blanc m
Collins English/French Electronic Resource. © HarperCollins Publishers 2005
white
adj (+er)
(= refined: Cook) flour → Weiß-; rice → weiß
white
:
white book
n (US Pol) → Weißbuch nt
white
:
White Ensign
n Fahne der Royal Navy
white fox
n → Polarfuchs m
white goods
pl (Comm: = electrical appliances) → Haushaltsgeräte pl (Kühlschrank, Waschmaschine, Herd etc)
white-haired
adj
(US inf: = favourite) the boss’s white boy → der Liebling des Chefs
Whitehall
n (= British government) → Whitehall no art; if white decides … → wenn London beschließt …
white list
n (Internet) → White List f, Liste spam- und virenfreier Websites, Absender und Programme
whitelist
vt (Internet) website, address, program → auf die White List setzen
white
:
whiteout
n
(= snow blindness) → Whiteout m
white paper
n (Pol) → Weißbuch nt → (on zu)
white rhino, white rhinoceros
white sidewall haircut
n (inf) → Bürstenschnitt m (mit seitlich rasierten oder sehr kurzen Haaren)
white slavery, white slave trade
white
:
whitewall (tyre)
n → Weißwandreifen m
white-water rafting
n → Rafting nt, → Wildwasserfahren nt
white witch
n → weiße Hexe (die weiße Magie praktiziert)
Collins German Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged 7th Edition 2005. © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1980 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1997, 1999, 2004, 2005, 2007
Collins Italian Dictionary 1st Edition © HarperCollins Publishers 1995
white
(wait) adjective
1. of the colour of the paper on which these words are printed. The bride wore a white dress.
2. having light-coloured skin, through being of European etc descent. the first white man to explore Africa.
3. abnormally pale, because of fear, illness etc. He went white with shock.
4. with milk in it. A white coffee, please.
noun
1. the colour of the paper on which these words are printed. White and black are opposites.
2. a white-skinned person. racial trouble between blacks and whites.
3. (also ˈegg-white) the clear fluid in an egg, surrounding the yolk. This recipe tells you to separate the yolks from the whites.
4. (of an eye) the white part surrounding the pupil and iris. The whites of her eyes are bloodshot.
ˈwhiten verb
to make or become white or whiter. She used a little bleach to whiten the sheets.
ˈwhiteness nounˈwhitening noun
a substance used to make certain things (eg tennis shoes) white again.
ˈwhitish adjective
fairly white; close to white.
ˌwhite-ˈcollar adjective
(of workers, jobs etc) not manual; (working) in an office etc.
white elephant
a useless, unwanted possession.
white horse noun
(usually in plural) a wave that has a crest of white foam.
ˌwhite-ˈhot adjective
(of metals) so hot that they have turned white. a white-hot poker.
white lie
a not very serious lie. I’d rather tell my mother a white lie than tell her the truth and upset her.
ˈwhitewash noun
a mixture of usually lime and water, used for whitening walls.
verb
to cover with whitewash.
ˈwhitewashed adjectivewhite winewine
Kernerman English Multilingual Dictionary © 2006-2013 K Dictionaries Ltd.
white
→ أَبْيَض bílý hvid weiß λευκός blanco valkoinen blanc bijeli bianco 白い 흰 wit hvit biały branco белый vit สีขาว beyaz trắng 白的
Multilingual Translator © HarperCollins Publishers 2009
white
n. color blanco;
___ of the egg → clara de huevo;
a. blanco-a;
___ corpuscle → leucocito, glóbulo ___.
English-Spanish Medical Dictionary © Farlex 2012
- In black and white
- Coffee with milk, please (US)
A white coffee, please (UK) - Can you recommend a good white wine?
- A bottle of white wine
- A carafe of white wine
Collins Multilingual Translator © HarperCollins Publishers 2009
white
adj blanco; n (of an egg) clara
English-Spanish/Spanish-English Medical Dictionary Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
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I’m a suspicious mulatto, which means I’m too black to be white and too white to be doing it right.
Lemon Andersen
ETYMOLOGY OF THE WORD WHITE
Old English hwīt; related to Old Frisian hwīt, Old Saxon hwīt, Old Norse hvītr, Gothic hveits, Old High German hwīz (German weiss).
Etymology is the study of the origin of words and their changes in structure and significance.
PRONUNCIATION OF WHITE
GRAMMATICAL CATEGORY OF WHITE
White is a verb and can also act as a noun and an adjective.
A noun is a type of word the meaning of which determines reality. Nouns provide the names for all things: people, objects, sensations, feelings, etc.
The adjective is the word that accompanies the noun to determine or qualify it.
The verb is the part of the sentence that is conjugated and expresses action and state of being.
See the conjugation of the verb white in English.
WHAT DOES WHITE MEAN IN ENGLISH?
White
White is the color of milk and fresh snow, the color produced by the combination of all the colors of the visible spectrum. As a symbol, white is the opposite of black, and often represents light in contrast with darkness. According to surveys in Europe and the United States, white is the color most often associated with innocence, perfection, the good, honesty, cleanliness, the beginning, the new, neutrality, lightness, and exactitude.
Definition of white in the English dictionary
The first definition of white in the dictionary is consisting of all the colours of the spectrum or produced by certain mixtures of three additive primary colours, such as red, green, and blue. Other definition of white is comparatively white or whitish-grey in colour or having parts of this colour. White is also having pale-coloured or white skin, fur, or feathers.
CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO WHITE
PRESENT
Present
I white
you white
he/she/it whites
we white
you white
they white
Present continuous
I am whiting
you are whiting
he/she/it is whiting
we are whiting
you are whiting
they are whiting
Present perfect
I have whited
you have whited
he/she/it has whited
we have whited
you have whited
they have whited
Present perfect continuous
I have been whiting
you have been whiting
he/she/it has been whiting
we have been whiting
you have been whiting
they have been whiting
Present tense is used to refer to circumstances that exist at the present time or over a period that includes the present time. The present perfect refers to past events, although it can be considered to denote primarily the resulting present situation rather than the events themselves.
PAST
Past
I whited
you whited
he/she/it whited
we whited
you whited
they whited
Past continuous
I was whiting
you were whiting
he/she/it was whiting
we were whiting
you were whiting
they were whiting
Past perfect
I had whited
you had whited
he/she/it had whited
we had whited
you had whited
they had whited
Past perfect continuous
I had been whiting
you had been whiting
he/she/it had been whiting
we had been whiting
you had been whiting
they had been whiting
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will white
you will white
he/she/it will white
we will white
you will white
they will white
Future continuous
I will be whiting
you will be whiting
he/she/it will be whiting
we will be whiting
you will be whiting
they will be whiting
Future perfect
I will have whited
you will have whited
he/she/it will have whited
we will have whited
you will have whited
they will have whited
Future perfect continuous
I will have been whiting
you will have been whiting
he/she/it will have been whiting
we will have been whiting
you will have been whiting
they will have been whiting
The future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would white
you would white
he/she/it would white
we would white
you would white
they would white
Conditional continuous
I would be whiting
you would be whiting
he/she/it would be whiting
we would be whiting
you would be whiting
they would be whiting
Conditional perfect
I would have white
you would have white
he/she/it would have white
we would have white
you would have white
they would have white
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been whiting
you would have been whiting
he/she/it would have been whiting
we would have been whiting
you would have been whiting
they would have been whiting
Conditional or «future-in-the-past» tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you white
we let´s white
you white
The imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Present Participle
whiting
Infinitive shows the action beyond temporal perspective. The present participle or gerund shows the action during the session. The past participle shows the action after completion.
WORDS THAT RHYME WITH WHITE
Synonyms and antonyms of white in the English dictionary of synonyms
SYNONYMS OF «WHITE»
The following words have a similar or identical meaning as «white» and belong to the same grammatical category.
Translation of «white» into 25 languages
TRANSLATION OF WHITE
Find out the translation of white to 25 languages with our English multilingual translator.
The translations of white from English to other languages presented in this section have been obtained through automatic statistical translation; where the essential translation unit is the word «white» in English.
Translator English — Chinese
白的
1,325 millions of speakers
Translator English — Spanish
blanco
570 millions of speakers
English
white
510 millions of speakers
Translator English — Hindi
सफेद
380 millions of speakers
Translator English — Arabic
أَبْيَض
280 millions of speakers
Translator English — Russian
белый
278 millions of speakers
Translator English — Portuguese
branco
270 millions of speakers
Translator English — Bengali
সাদা
260 millions of speakers
Translator English — French
blanc
220 millions of speakers
Translator English — Malay
Putih
190 millions of speakers
Translator English — German
weiß
180 millions of speakers
Translator English — Japanese
白い
130 millions of speakers
Translator English — Korean
흰
85 millions of speakers
Translator English — Javanese
putih
85 millions of speakers
Translator English — Vietnamese
trắng
80 millions of speakers
Translator English — Tamil
வெள்ளை
75 millions of speakers
Translator English — Marathi
पांढरा
75 millions of speakers
Translator English — Turkish
beyaz
70 millions of speakers
Translator English — Italian
bianco
65 millions of speakers
Translator English — Polish
biały
50 millions of speakers
Translator English — Ukrainian
білий
40 millions of speakers
Translator English — Romanian
alb
30 millions of speakers
Translator English — Greek
λευκός
15 millions of speakers
Translator English — Afrikaans
wit
14 millions of speakers
Translator English — Swedish
vit
10 millions of speakers
Translator English — Norwegian
hvit
5 millions of speakers
Trends of use of white
TENDENCIES OF USE OF THE TERM «WHITE»
The term «white» is very widely used and occupies the 472 position in our list of most widely used terms in the English dictionary.
FREQUENCY
Very widely used
The map shown above gives the frequency of use of the term «white» in the different countries.
Principal search tendencies and common uses of white
List of principal searches undertaken by users to access our English online dictionary and most widely used expressions with the word «white».
FREQUENCY OF USE OF THE TERM «WHITE» OVER TIME
The graph expresses the annual evolution of the frequency of use of the word «white» during the past 500 years. Its implementation is based on analysing how often the term «white» appears in digitalised printed sources in English between the year 1500 and the present day.
Examples of use in the English literature, quotes and news about white
10 QUOTES WITH «WHITE»
Famous quotes and sentences with the word white.
In the sudden absence of husbands, fathers, brothers and beaus, white Southern women discovered a newfound freedom — one that simultaneously granted them more power in relationships and increased their likelihood of heartbreak.
Some white people hate black people, and some white people love black people, some black people hate white people, and some black people love white people. So you see it’s not an issue of black and white, it’s an issue of Lovers and Haters.
I would say things like ‘I am the greatest! I’m pretty! If you talk jive, you’ll drop in five! I float like a butterfly, sting like a bee! I’m pretty!’ When white people heard me talking like this, some said, ‘That black man talks too much. He’s bragging.’
I’m a suspicious mulatto, which means I’m too black to be white and too white to be doing it right.
Over the tops of it, beginning to dusk under a young white moon, trailed a wavering ghost of smoke, and at the end of it I came upon the Pocket Hunter making a dry camp in the friendly scrub.
My people have a country of their own to go to if they choose… Africa… but, this America belongs to them just as much as it does to any of the white race… in some ways even more so, because they gave the sweat of their brow and their blood in slavery so that many parts of America could become prosperous and recognized in the world.
Diabetes occurs at twice the rate in the African American community as it does in white Americans.
Slavery is, as an example of what white America has done, a constant reminder of what white America might do.
Twitter is a place where you share your thoughts, yourself… you don’t want a plain white backdrop for that. You want the entire page to say something about who you are. Designer or not, if the urge strikes you, go for it. Put up that watercolor you’ve never shown anyone. Take a photo of that hat you just knitted… whatever it is, share it.
The one thing that always bothered me when I played in the NBA was I really got irritated when they put a white guy on me.
10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «WHITE»
Discover the use of white in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to white and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
Four stories are told simultaneously, with each double-page spread divided into quadrants. The stories do not necessarily take place at the same moment in time, but are they really one story?
«All of the essays manifest not only [Didion’s] intelligence but an instinct for details that continue to emit pulsations in the reader’s memory and a style that is spare, subtly musical in its phrasing and exact.
White people are not literally or symbolically white, yet they are called white.
4
White-Collar Crime: The Essentials: The Essentials
This is an easily-supplemented resource for any course that covers white collar crime.
5
White Logic, White Methods: Racism and Methodology
With an assemblage of leading scholars, this collection explores the possibilities and necessary dethroning of current social research practices.
Tukufu Zuberi, Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, 2008
6
E.B. White: A Biography
A biography of the popular American children’s author recounts his childhood, his education at Cornell, and his long association with the New Yorker magazine Here is a richly detailed and vivid biography of the man who wrote ‘Charlotte’s …
7
White Collar: The American Middle Classes
This landmark volume demonstrates how the conditions and styles of middle class life—originating from elements of both the newer lower and upper classes—represent modern society as a whole.
8
The History of White People
A story filled with towering historical figures, The History of White People closes a huge gap in literature that has long focused on the non-white and forcefully reminds us that the concept of “race” is an all-too-human invention whose …
9
Encyclopedia of White-Collar & Corporate Crime
From Enron to Martha Stewart, white-collar crime has become a topic of almost daily news. Is it greed, arrogance, naivete, elitism, or merely a reflection of our times?
Lawrence M. Salinger, 2005
10
White-Collar Crime: Detection, Prevention and Strategy in …
Executive positions involved in crime, white-collar crime analysis, response to crime suspicion, corporate social responsibility, and corporate reputation damage and repair are some of the core topics of this book.
10 NEWS ITEMS WHICH INCLUDE THE TERM «WHITE»
Find out what the national and international press are talking about and how the term white is used in the context of the following news items.
Billy Pierce, White Sox Power Pitcher in the 1950s, Dies at 88
Billy Pierce, the Chicago White Sox left-hander with a blazing fastball who became one of baseball’s leading pitchers of the 1950s, died on Friday in Palos … «New York Times, Jul 15»
White Sox-Red Sox Preview
The acquisition of Jeff Samardzija was one of the many moves the Chicago White Sox made in the offseason that had them believing they could make a run at … «FOXSports.com, Jul 15»
2005 White Sox take another bow in celebration of World Series …
Former Chicago White Sox players wave to fans during a 2005 World Series … White Sox’s 2005 celebration continues Saturday at U.S. Cellular Field. About the … «Chicago Tribune, Jul 15»
White Sox exude rare optimism at the break
CHICAGO — It was not a first half of the season to make the Chicago White Sox feel like contenders, but the immediate run up to the all-star break did make them … «ESPN, Jul 15»
Walkoff home run in 11th inning lifts White Sox over Blue Jays
Adam Eaton’s walkoff home run in the 11th inning lifted the Chicago White Sox to a 7-6 win over the Toronto Blue Jays on Wednesday night. Eaton hammered a … «The Globe and Mail, Jul 15»
White Sox likely sellers at trade deadline, but who’s appealing?
But the White Flag trade of 1997, when the Sox trailed the Indians by only 3 1/2 games at the trade deadline, remains one of the seminal moments in team … «Chicago Tribune, Jun 15»
Sunday’s recap: Tigers 5, White Sox 4
The Tigers came back from a four-run deficit to win 5-4 on James McCann’s walk-off home run on an 0-2 pitch from Zach Putnam. The Sox are 2-4 on the trip … «Chicago Tribune, Jun 15»
White Supremacist Who Influenced Charleston Suspect Donated to …
The leader of a white supremacist group that apparently influenced Dylann Roof, the suspect in the killing of nine African-Americans in a Charleston, S.C., … «New York Times, Jun 15»
I Sometimes Don’t Want to Be White Either
Rachel Dolezal is a fascinating case study in White racial identity development.* She is stuck in the immersion/emersion stage, in which White people, having … «Huffington Post, Jun 15»
Position play needed for White Sox in draft
CHICAGO — The Major League Baseball first-year player draft can be a fickle process and perhaps no team understands that better than the Chicago White Sox. «ESPN, Jun 15»
REFERENCE
« EDUCALINGO. White [online]. Available <https://educalingo.com/en/dic-en/white>. Apr 2023 ».
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Discover all that is hidden in the words on
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Defenition of the word white
- Bright and colourless; reflecting equal quantities of all frequencies of visible light.
- A Caucasian person with light-coloured skin; a member of the Caucasoid race.
- The colour of light that contains equal amounts of all visible wavelengths.
- Of or belonging to a racial group having light skin coloration.
- ash-colored or anemic looking from illness or emotion; «a face turned ashen»; «the invalid’s blanched cheeks»; «tried to speak with bloodless lips»; «a face livid with shock»; «lips…livid with the hue of death»- Mary W. Shelley; «lips white with terror»; «a face white with rage»
- of a surface; not written or printed on; «blank pages»; «fill in the blank spaces»; «a clean page»; «wide white margins»
- (usually in the plural) trousers
- of or belonging to a racial group having light skin coloration; «voting patterns within the white population»
- of summer nights in northern latitudes where the sun barely sets; «white nights»
- (of wine) almost colorless; «white wines such as chardonnays or rieslings»; «a white burgundy»; «white Italian wines»
- dressed (or especially habited) in white; «white nuns»
- (of coffee) having cream or milk added
- benevolent; without malicious intent; «white magic»; «a white lie»; «that’s white of you»
- free from moral blemish or impurity; unsullied; «in shining white armor»
- (chess or checkers) the lighter-colored pieces
- being of the achromatic color of maximum lightness; having little or no hue owing to reflection of almost all incident light; «as white as fresh snow»; «a bride’s white dress»
- restricted to whites only; «under segregation there were even white restrooms and white drinking fountains»; «a lily-white movement which would expel Negroes from the organization»
- marked by the presence of snow; «a white Christmas»; «the white hills of a northern winter»
- glowing white with heat; «white flames»; a white-hot center of the fire»
- (of hair) having lost its color; «the white hairs of old age»
- the quality or state of the achromatic color of greatest lightness (bearing the least resemblance to black)
- a member of the Caucasoid race
- a tributary of the Mississippi River
- turn white; «This detergent will whiten your laundry»
- (board games) the lighter pieces
- a tributary of the Mississippi River that flows southeastward through northern Arkansas and southern Missouri
- United States educator who in 1865 (with Ezra Cornell) founded Cornell University and served as its first president (1832-1918)
- United States writer noted for his humorous essays (1899-1985)
- United States architect (1853-1906)
- United States political journalist (1915-1986)
- Australian writer (1912-1990)
- being of the achromatic color of maximum lightness; having little or no hue owing to reflection of almost all incident light; «as white as fresh snow»; «a bride»s white dress»
- ash-colored or anemic looking from illness or emotion; «a face turned ashen»; «the invalid»s blanched cheeks»; «tried to speak with bloodless lips»; «a face livid with shock»; «lips…livid with the hue of death»- Mary W. Shelley; «lips white with terror
- benevolent; without malicious intent; «white magic»; «a white lie»; «that»s white of you»
- glowing white with heat; «white flames»; «a white-hot center of the fire»
- (usually in the plural) trousers made of flannel or gabardine or tweed or white cloth
- the white part of an egg; the nutritive and protective gelatinous substance surrounding the yolk consisting mainly of albumin dissolved in water
- United States jurist appointed chief justice of the United States Supreme Court in 1910 by President Taft; noted for his work on antitrust legislation (1845-1921)
- turn white
- of or belonging to a racial group having light skin coloration
- of summer nights in northern latitudes where the sun barely sets
- being of the achromatic color of maximum lightness; having little or no hue owing to reflection of almost all incident light
- anemic looking from illness or emotion
- (of hair) having lost its color
- (of a surface) not written or printed on
- benevolent; without malicious intent
- glowing white with heat
- restricted to whites only
- marked by the presence of snow
- free from moral blemish or impurity; unsullied
Synonyms for the word white
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- achromatic
- ashen
- blanched
- blank
- bloodless
- Caucasian
- clean
- colorless
- fair
- flannel
- gabardine
- lily-white
- livid
- pallid
- pasty
- sallow
- snowy
- tweed
- White
- white person
- White River
- white-hot
- whiten
- whitened
- whiteness
Similar words in the white
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- albescent
- caucasian
- caucasoid
- clad
- clothed
- colorless
- colourless
- covered
- dilute
- diluted
- empty
- good
- hot
- light
- light-skinned
- pure
- segregated
- unintegrated
- white
- white’s
- whitecap
- whitecap’s
- whitecaps
- whited
- whitefield
- whitefield’s
- whitefish
- whitefish’s
- whitefishes
- whitehall
- whitehall’s
- whitehead
- whitehead’s
- whitehorse
- whitehorse’s
- whiteley
- whiteley’s
- whiten
- whitened
- whitener
- whitener’s
- whiteners
- whiteness
- whiteness’s
- whitening
- whitens
- whiter
- whites
- whitest
- whitewall
- whitewall’s
- whitewalls
- whitewash
- whitewash’s
- whitewashed
- whitewashes
- whitewashing
Meronymys for the word white
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- AR
- Arkansas
- Caucasian race
- Caucasoid race
- Land of Opportunity
- Missouri
- MO
- Show Me State
- White people
- White race
Hyponyms for the word white
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- alabaster
- Aryan
- blanco
- bleach
- bone
- Cassite
- chalk
- Circassian
- Elamite
- frostiness
- hoariness
- honkey
- honkie
- honky
- ivory
- Kassite
- off-white
- paleface
- pearl
- poor white
- poor white trash
- Semite
- WASP
- white Anglo-Saxon Protestant
- white man
- white trash
- white woman
- whitey
Hypernyms for the word white
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- achromatic color
- achromatic colour
- architect
- author
- color
- colour
- designer
- discolor
- discolour
- educator
- fixings
- human
- individual
- ingredient
- journalist
- man
- mortal
- pant
- pants
- pedagogue
- person
- piece
- river
- somebody
- someone
- soul
- trouser
- trousers
- writer
Antonyms for the word white
-
- achromatic
- black
- blacken
- blackness
- melanise
- melanize
- nigrify
- red
See other words
-
- What is make
- The definition of ski
- The interpretation of the word daigaku
- What is meant by inside
- The lexical meaning install
- The dictionary meaning of the word ink
- The grammatical meaning of the word independent
- Meaning of the word imperil
- Literal and figurative meaning of the word imbecile
- The origin of the word why
- Synonym for the word well
- Antonyms for the word wire
- Homonyms for the word wind
- Hyponyms for the word wait
- Holonyms for the word valley
- Hypernyms for the word vanish
- Proverbs and sayings for the word vendor
- Translation of the word in other languages vigorously
Meaning White
What does White mean? Here you find 48 meanings of the word White. You can also add a definition of White yourself
1 |
0 A social colour. The term is used to refer to people belonging to the majority group in Canada. It is recognized that there are many different people who are “White” but who face discrimination be [..]
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2 |
0 WhiteOld English hwit «bright, radiant; clear, fair,» also as a noun (see separate entry), from Proto-Germanic *hwitaz (source also of Old Saxon and Old Frisian hwit, Old Norse hvitr, Dutch wit, [..]
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3 |
0 WhiteOld English hwit «whiteness, white food, white of an egg,» from white (adj.). Also in late Old English «a highly luminous color devoid of chroma.» Meaning «white part of the e [..]
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4 |
0 WhiteWhite [N]a symbol of purity ( 2 Chronicles 5:12 ; Psalms 51:7 ; Isaiah 1:18 ; Revelation 3:18 ; 7:14 ). Our Lord, at his transfiguration, appeared in raiment «white as the light» ( Matthew [..]
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5 |
0 WhiteThe term usually used to describe people with European ancestral origins who identify, or are identified, as White (sometimes called European, or in terms of racial classifications, the group known as Caucasian or Caucasoid). The word is capitalised to highlight its specific use. The term has served to distinguish these groups from those groups wit [..]
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0 Whitea member of the Caucasoid race being of the achromatic color of maximum lightness; having little or no hue owing to reflection of almost all incident light; &quot;as white as fresh snow&am [..]
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0 Whitethe colour of snow
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8 |
0 WhiteDirect Allied-sponsored propaganda
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9 |
0 WhiteDictionary of RGB Colours RGB: 255;255;255Hex: FFFFFF See example…
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10 |
0 Whitethe centre of an archery butt.
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11 |
0 Whitea symbol of purity (2 Chr. 5:12; Ps. 51:7; Isa. 1:18; Rev. 3:18; 7:14). Our Lord, at his transfiguration, appeared in raiment «white as the light» (Matt. 17:2, etc.).
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12 |
0 WhiteAmerican psychologist. White received his doctorate in psychology at Harvard University, working alongside Henry A. Murray, a renowned character researcher. He was added to the staff at Harvard and st [..]
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13 |
0 Whitevays
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14 |
0 WhiteSee colors
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15 |
0 WhiteA horse color, extremely rare, in which all the hairs are white. The horse’s eyes are brown, not pink, as would be the case for an albino.
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16 |
0 WhiteThe term used to describe the skin colour of the inhabitants of Europe and their emigrant populations. It is literally inaccurate but has connotations of power, sophistication and progress, for exampl [..]
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17 |
0 White(n) a member of the Caucasoid race(n) the quality or state of the achromatic color of greatest lightness (bearing the least resemblance to black)(n) United States jurist appointed chief justice of [..]
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18 |
0 White(b. London, May 11th, 1819). Life in Christ (1846), Mystery of Growth, etc. (1867), Some of the Minor Moralities of Life (1868), L [..]
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19 |
0 White(b. Nottingham, August 21st, 1785; d. Cambridge, October 19th, 1806) was the author of Clifton Grove and other poems, published in 1803. Remains were edited, with a Life, [..]
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20 |
0 White(b. 1775; d. 1841). Letters from Spain by Don Leucadio Dollado (1821); Practical and Internal Evidence against Catholicism (1826); Second Travels of a [..]
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21 |
0 WhiteReuben Shapcott (b Bedford, December 22nd, 1831). The Autobiography of Mark Rutherford (1881); Mark Rutherfords Deliverance (1885) [..]
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22 |
0 WhiteA horse color, extremely rare, in which all the hairs are white. The horse’s eyes are brown, not pink, as would be the case for an albino.
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23 |
0 White(egg): Several layers of albumen inside the egg — clear in an undeveloped egg.
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24 |
0 WhiteProcess unfermented; no processing except for drying leaves. Rare
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25 |
0 WhiteRefers to any spirit that is clear
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26 |
0 WhiteAn Ethnic Group of putative Caucasoid origin.
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27 |
0 WhiteAustralian Maritime Law, 2 Ed., 2000, Federation Press, Annandale, N.S.W., Australia.
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28 |
0 Whitepeople belonging to any of various peoples with light coloured skin, usually of European origin. The term has become an indicator less of skin colour and more of racialized characteristics.
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29 |
0 WhiteThe color of dog that lacks pigmentation.
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30 |
0 Whiteor Bloomy Rind:
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31 |
0 WhiteHarry Dexter White (1892–1948) was an American economist who spent most of his career at the US Treasury and the International Monetary Fund (IMF). …
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32 |
0 White, v. to cut small chips off a stick with a knife.
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33 |
0 WhiteGood, okay, as in “white dick”
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34 |
0 WhiteSee theLOW SPEECH Glossary.
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35 |
0 WhiteA term used to refer to a program that has been acknowledged and its capabilities are known, e.g. F-15, F-16
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36 |
0 WhiteNot vulnerable. Also British colloquialism meaning neither side vulnerable.
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37 |
0 WhiteSee: Vulnerability conditions
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38 |
0 WhiteDescribes the player’s army who moves first, at the start of each game. Typically, the White army will be colored White, whereas the Black army will, typically, be colored Black. However, with ‘artistic license’, manufacturers of Chess sets will play about with different color themes for the pieces. The main distinction is that White [..]
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39 |
0 WhiteOne end of a domino tile that bears no spots. Also known as a "blank", "zero", or "pale".
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40 |
0 WhiteOne of the players in the game, playing the lighter colored checkers. Whopper : A big blunder or mistake in a checker play or cube decision. See double whopper. Wipeout (Blitz): An [..]
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41 |
0 WhiteA person having origins in any of the original peoples of Europe, North Africa, or the Middle East. (In both the population and court data, nearly all youth of Hispanic ethnicity were included in the [..]
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42 |
0 White3.3V — 4.2V. Series resistor for 5V: 75 ohm.
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43 |
0 WhiteDaughter of J.J. White, Elizabeth continued her father’s cranberry production while expanding into cultivated blueberry production. Her research efforts, over a forty-year period, directly established the New Jersey commercial cultivated blueberry industry.
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44 |
0 WhiteLate Nineteenth Century New Jersey cranberry grower whose land holdings were located in Burlington County and named Whitesbog. His pioneering efforts in developing and growing cranberries contributed greatly to the knowledge base for successful cranberry production.
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45 |
0 WhiteA person having origins in any of the original peoples of Europe, the Middle East, or North Africa.
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46 |
0 WhiteBright and colourless; reflecting equal quantities of all frequencies of visible light. (Write in black ink on white paper.) *(1807-1882) *: white as the whitest lily on a stream. * »’1962»’ [..]
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47 |
0 White[[5@Chest-PalmBack FlatO@NearChest-PalmBack]]
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48 |
0 Whitelang=en 1600s=1678 * »’1678»’ — . »».
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