Definitions Related words Mentions Colors (New!)
Color:
Stark White


More info:
ColorHexa


Colors with the same hue:
Pitch
Tar
Coal
Jet
Hematite
Tungsten
Smalt 
Soot
Egyptian blue
Faded Black
Dusk
Dim gray
Dolphin
Gray 
Weathered Gray
Dusty
Haze
Quick silver
Striking Silver
Dark gray 
Silver
Cloud
Light Gray
Stainless Steel
Soap
Light silver
Sparkling Silver
Gainsboro
Chrome
Mercury
Similar colors:
White
Cultured
Luminous White
Marble White
Shell
Ethereal White
Mercury
Whisper
Chrome
Magnolia
Gainsboro
Sparkling Silver
Light silver
Stainless Steel
Light Gray
Shimmer
Cloud
Moonlight
Porcelain
Silver
Soap
Pale lavender
Soft Lavender
Fog
Dark gray 
Striking Silver
Faint Pink
Periwinkle
Quick silver
Faded Lavender
Words evoked by this color:
bering,  untouched,  6,500,  blanc,  blanco,  egret,  niveous,  blanca,  cocaine,  whiteout,  nival,  gesso,  wight,  scleral,  leukocyte,  dentition,  incisor,  molar,  albumen,  sclera,  tooth,  teeth,  snowy,  dental,  gypsum,  alumina,  spackle,  ejaculate,  flour,  bleach,  lard,  whitewash,  ejaculation,  semen,  garlic,  whit,  albino,  sperm,  tofu,  receipts,  hydroxyapatite,  ceiling,  unadulterated,  purely,  unsullied,  pure,  purest,  purer,  snaw,  bloodless
Literary analysis:
In literature, "stark white" is often employed not simply as a hue, but as a potent symbol that conveys silence, isolation, and the interplay between light and shadow. For example, its use to evoke a cold, almost desolate atmosphere is apparent in descriptions of nature—whether it’s the dead, white trunks of ancient trees that remind us of an inviolable past ([1], [2]) or the way its inclusion suggests a deep, piercing loneliness that yearns for warmth ([3]). Meanwhile, in human depictions, contrasting the dark with the stark white—as in a dress set off against a darker complexion ([4]) or a face suddenly turned pallid ([5], [6])—this color accentuates emotional intensity and unexpected vulnerability. Even in architectural and environmental settings, such as the crisp village houses along a shore ([7]) or the rigid white dial of a clock ([8]), "stark white" reinforces a sense of clarity, austerity, and sometimes foreboding, demonstrating its versatile power as a literary device.
  1. The stark white and gray trunks of the immemorial forest dead linked us to an inviolable past.
    — from The Blue-Grass Region of Kentucky, and Other Kentucky Articles by James Lane Allen
  2. There was nothing but the snow and the dead quiet and the stark white boles of the trees.
    — from Soldier Boy by Michael Shaara
  3. Perhaps its coldness, its stark whiteness, its vast silence suggest that which makes the heart reach out for some warm pulse of friendship.
    — from Neighbours by Robert J. C. Stead
  4. Her dark face stood out strangely against the stark white of her dress.
    — from Jet Plane Mystery by Roy J. (Roy Judson) Snell
  5. He didn't know that his face had gone suddenly stark white, and that a curious glitter had come to his eyes.
    — from The Strength of the Pines by Edison Marshall
  6. Edith’s face was stark white, and her voice was very low.
    — from Kastle Krags: A Story of Mystery by Absalom Martin
  7. He looked about the bare room and out at the bare beach and the row of stark white village houses strung along the shore.
    — from The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton
  8. Behind him on a rear wall a large clock marked six, the hands, on the stark white dial, rigid as the limbs of the crucified.
    — from The Narrow House by Evelyn Scott

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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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