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- Dictionaryvermilion/vəˈmɪlɪən/
noun
- 1. a brilliant red pigment made from mercury sulphide (cinnabar).
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Vermilion is a bright red colour or having a bright red colour. Learn how to use it in sentences, see examples from different sources and find translations in other languages.
- English (US)
adjective. us / vɚˈmɪl.jən / uk / vəˈmɪl.jən / having a...
- Vermilion: Thai Translation
vermilion translate: สีแดงชาด. Learn more in the Cambridge...
- Vermilion: Norwegian Translation
vermilion - translate into Norwegian with the...
- Vermilion: French Translation
VERMILION translate: vermillon. Learn more in the Cambridge...
- Vermilion: Vietnamese Translation
vermilion translate: có màu đỏ son. Learn more in the...
- Vermilion: Danish Translation
vermilion - translate into Danish with the English-Danish...
- Vermilion in Simplified Chinese
VERMILION translate: 朱红色,鲜红色, 朱红色的,鲜红色的. Learn more in the...
- Translate English to Indonesian
vermilion translate: warna merah cemerlang. Learn more in...
- English (US)
1. : a vivid reddish orange. 2. : a bright red pigment consisting of mercuric sulfide. broadly : any of various red pigments. Examples of vermilion in a Sentence.
Vermilion (sometimes vermillion) is a color family and pigment most often used between antiquity and the 19th century from the powdered mineral cinnabar (a form of mercury sulfide). It is synonymous with red orange, which often takes a modern form, but is 11% brighter (at full brightness).
Vermilion is a bright red or reddish-orange colour, or a pigment made from mercury and sulfur. Learn more about its origin, usage, and related terms from Collins English Dictionary.
Vermilion is a bright red color or a word that describes something with a bright red color. Learn how to use vermilion in sentences, compare it with scarlet, and find out how to say it in different languages.
Vermilion is a deep, brilliant shade of red. You could describe your grandfather's reddish-orange scarf as vermilion.
a bright-red, water-insoluble pigment consisting of mercuric sulfide, once obtained from cinnabar, now usually produced by the reaction of mercury and sulfur.