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Definition of Deep red
1. Noun. A deep and vivid red color.
Generic synonyms: Red, Redness
Derivative terms: Crimson, Crimson, Rubify
Lexicographical Neighbors of Deep Red
Literary usage of Deep red
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1900)
"... one from Nova Scotia, but in addition many portions of the dead bark and wood
were thickly studded with the minute, deep red perithecia of a Nectria. ..."
2. Harper's New Monthly Magazine by Henry Mills Alden (1883)
"deep red and pure white, were In bloom round the door, Which stood frankly open,
the cat on the threshold, And a gay braided mat to protect the white floor. ..."
3. The Popular Science Monthly (1894)
"The stone produced here, as well as along the Delaware River, is of a deep-red
color, contains large quantities of ferruginous matter, is of uneven texture, ..."
4. The Cruise of the Betsey: Or, a Summer Ramble Among the Fossiliferous by Hugh Miller, William Samuel Symonds (1858)
"THE ravine excavated by the mill-dam showed me what I had never so well seen
before, — the exact relation Ironie by the deep red stone of the ..."
5. Chemical Abstracts by American Chemical Society (1916)
"AcONa, deep red rectangular columns with a Cu luster, m. ... The alk. soin, is
deep red. Sodium salt, deep red cryst. powder, ..."