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Color:
Pewter


More info:
ColorHexa


Colors with the same hue:
Seaweed
Viridian
Serene Green
Misty Blue
Aquamarine
Dew
Similar colors:
Morning blue
Opal
Patina
Cambridge blue
Ash gray
Xanadu
Serene Green
Smoke
Dew
Chromium
Viridian
Gun
Oxley
Laurel
Eton blue
Lagoon
Chameleon
Light Sage
Keppel
Pallid White
Nickel
Asparagus
Spearmint
Feldgrau
Misty Blue
Arctic White
Luminous Silver
Verdigris
Amazon
Forest green 
Words evoked by this color:
askance,  pew,  griswold,  nuances,  manmade,  shamble,  forgotten,  neglected,  slipshod,  disheveled,  muffle,  afterthought,  unsung,  slackened,  chastened,  silenced,  chasten,  plaint,  inarticulate,  low-key,  subdued,  subduing,  subdue,  disarmed,  unsaid,  unspoken,  indirect,  humbling,  despised,  loathe,  embittered,  displeasure,  cramped,  unwelcome,  tainted,  sordid,  turbulence,  impend,  unacceptable,  wretched,  unwholesome,  worsening,  stringency,  bilge,  penury,  choked,  destitution,  unsustainable,  inhospitable,  foreclose
Literary analysis:
In literature, the term “pewter” often conveys both a sense of everyday utilitarian charm and an air of nostalgic antiquity. Washington Irving, for instance, uses it to create vivid, almost dazzling images of resplendent household items ([1]), while Rousseau’s mention of pewter plates and utensils underscores the modest comforts of daily life ([2]). In more dramatic contexts, as with Herman Melville’s narrative where a character receives a brimming pewter container ([3]), or Andersen’s imaginative personification of a pewter soldier ([4]), the substance becomes a dynamic, almost character-like element. Across these varied contexts, pewter stands as a symbol of enduring materiality and subtle whimsy in the literary imagination.
  1. Here rows of resplendent pewter, ranged on a long dresser, dazzled his eyes.
    — from The Sketch-Book of Geoffrey Crayon by Washington Irving
  2. We had but one little and very filthy candle, pewter plates, and iron forks.
    — from The Confessions of Jean Jacques Rousseau — Complete by Jean-Jacques Rousseau
  3. Receiving the brimming pewter, and turning to the harpooneers, he ordered them to produce their weapons.
    — from Moby Dick; Or, The Whale by Herman Melville
  4. “I thank you for the pewter soldier, my little friend!” said the old man.
    — from Andersen's Fairy Tales by H. C. Andersen


Colors associated with the word:
Charcoal
Graphite
Silver 
Gunmetal
Smoke
Stone
Lead
Flint
Iron
Nickel
Zinc
Cloud
Mist
Fossil
Words with similar colors:
browbeat,  seal,  pit,  grit,  gray,  obfuscate,  substance,  shadow,  laconic,  delineate,  egress,  pithy,  shade,  collapse,  suppress,  fissure,  fell,  mimic,  fuse,  adumbrate
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This tab, the new OneLook "color thesaurus", is a work in progress. It draws from a data set of more than 2000 color names gathered from sources around the Web, and an analysis of how they are referenced in English texts. Some words, like "peach", function as both a color name and an object; when you do a search for words like these, you will see both of the above sections.



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