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A Writer's Dictionary:

blacker Definition


Dictionary Home » Words Starting with B » black spot ... blanking » blacker


black
adj blacker, blackest
    1. Having the darkest colour, the same colour as coal; reflecting no light.
      Thesaurus: dark, raven, jet, sable, dusky, murky, inky.
    2. Without any light; totally dark.
    3. Used of people: dark-skinned, especially of African, West Indian or Australian Aboriginal origin.
      Form: Black (now usually)
    4. Belonging or relating to Black people.
      Form: Black (usually)
    5. Said of coffee or tea: without added milk.
    6. Angry; threatening.
      Example: black looks
      Thesaurus: angry, fierce, enraged, furious.
    7. Dirty; soiled.
      Example: came in from the garden with his hands black
    8. Sad, gloomy or depressed; dismal.
      Example: a black mood
    9. Promising trouble; likely to be bad in some way.
      Example: The future looks black
      Thesaurus: threatening, forbidding, sinister, ominous, sullen, menacing, unpropitious.
    10. Wicked or sinister; grim or macabre.
      Example: black-hearted
      Example: black comedy
      Thesaurus: evil, villainous, mean, diabolical, wicked, nefarious, hostile.
    11. Said of goods, etc: not allowed by a trade union to be handled, especially during a strike.
    12. Said of income, etc: not reported in tax returns; illicit.
noun
    1. The colour of coal, etc, the darkest colour, or absence of colour.
    2. Anything which is black in colour, eg a black chess piece.
    3. A dark-skinned person, especially one of African, West Indian or Australian Aboriginal origin.
      Form: Black (usually)
    4. Black clothes worn when in mourning.
    5. A black pigment or dye.
    6. The credit side of an account; the state of not being in debt, eg to a bank Compare red noun 6.
      Form: be in the black (usually)
verb blacked, blacking
    1. To make something black.
      Example: The men blacked their faces with soot
      Form: blacken (also)
    2. To clean (shoes, etc) with black polish.
    3. Said of a trade union: to forbid work to be done on or with (certain goods).
Derivative: blackly
adverb
    In an angry or threatening way.
Derivative: blackness
noun
    Idiom: black in the face
      Purple in the face, due to exertion, anger, strangulation, etc.
    Idiom: in black and white
      In writing or in print.
      Having or using no colours, only black and white.
    Idiom: in someone's black books
      In trouble or disgrace, or out of favour with them
    Idiom: in the black
      In credit; solvent; out of debt
    Etymology: From the bookkeeping practice of writing in black ink on the credit side of a ledger. &clock; Anglo-Saxon blæc.

    Phrasal Verb: black out
      Said of a person: to lose consciousness.
    Phrasal Verb: black something out
      To deprive it of light; to extinguish or cover (lights), or all lights in (a place).To prevent (information) from being broadcast or published; to suppress (news, etc).


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