indigo

listen to the pronunciation of indigo
English - Turkish
çivit

Bir gökkuşağı kırmızı, turuncu, sarı, yeşil, mavi, çivit ve mordan oluşur. - A rainbow consists of red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet.

Gökkuşağının görünür renkleri kırmızı, turuncu, sarı, yeşil, mavi, çivit ve mordur. - The visible colors of the rainbow are red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet.

çividi
çivitotu
indigo
çivit, kimyada bir bileşik
Indigofera tinctoria
{i} (Botanik) çivitotu, indigo, Indigofera tinctoria
(isim) çivit
(Tıp) n.Çivit
indigo plant çivit fidanı
indigo blue
çividi
indigo blue
çivit rengi
indigo plant
ındigofera tinctoria
indigo plant
nil
indigo blue
indigo mavisi
indigo carmine
indigo karmen
indigo printing
indigo baskı
indigo vat
indigo teknesi
indigo white
indigo beyazı
indigo paper
indigo kağıt
indigo blue
lacivert
indigo blue
çivit mavisi
indigo blue
çivit
indigo plant
bot. çivitotu, indigo, Indigofera tinctoria
indigo plant
çivitotu
indigo vat
indigdo teknesi
Turkish - Turkish
çivitağacı
Koyu mavi renk
Bitkilerden özütlenen, doğal mavi boyar madde
English - English
A purplish-blue colour
A blue dye obtained from certain plants (the indigo plant or woad), or a similar synthetic dye

web indigo colour:.

Having a deep blue colour
RISC-based workstation made by Silicon Graphics that supports high-speed 2-D graphics and digital audio The Indigo uses display PostScript
A blue vegetable dye derived form a member of the pea family, A yellow juice from the plant oxidizes to blue upon exposure to air Indigo was chemically synthesized in 1880
Master Djwal Kul Used to heal sense organs, skin and sexual organs
a crop grown in St Charles Parish in early plantation days for the production of a blue dye
Anil, Nereum tinctorium, etc
A blue dyestuff obtained from several plants belonging to very different genera and orders; as, the woad, Isatis tinctoria, Indigofera tinctoria, I
a blue dye obtained from plants or made synthetically
n blue dye, C16H10N2O2, obtained from certain plants, esp a plant (Indigofera tinctoria) native to India, or made synthetically, usually from aniline
A blue dye obtained from the indigo plant
deep blue, enriched with red approaching purple
Indigo does not exist in the plants as such, but is obtained by decomposition of the glycoside indican
A plant that yields a blue vat dye
{i} dark violet-blue color
A kind of deep blue, one of the seven prismatic colors
Acronym for the Indien Gaz Ocean project, a series of three cruises taking place aboard the RV Marion Dufresne from 1985-1987 The INDIGO 14C activities are available from the CDIAC
a blue-violet color deciduous subshrub of southeastern Asia having pinnate leaves and clusters of red or purple flowers; a source of indigo dye
Something that is indigo is dark purplish blue in colour. a dark purple-blue colour (indicum, from indikos ). Blue vat dye, obtained until about 1900 entirely from some species of the indigo plant. Extraction of the dye was important to the economy of colonial America and remained so in India until the early 20th century. Synthetic indigo has replaced the natural dye; it is reduced chemically to the soluble yellow compound leucoindigo, in which form it is applied to textile fibres and reoxidized to indigo (see oxidation-reduction)
Blue dyes obtained from the leaves of the indigo plant
a variable color averaging a dark grayish blue A natural dye material of a deep blue color Natural Indigo is perhaps the oldest dye known to man The oldest historic texts speak of it, as in the colors chosen for the Tabernacle of the Arc of the Covenant The oldest fragments of cloth are dyed with it It was the original dye of the "Levi's" blue jeans, a trademark color for durability Natural Indigo is one of the fastest dyes known to man and is the only natural blue dye of permanence industry communications platform (ICP) technology, people and processes that employ the internet and other next generation applications to streamline communication and business activities in a targeted industry e g ApparelSearch com & edaflow
deciduous subshrub of southeastern Asia having pinnate leaves and clusters of red or purple flowers; a source of indigo dye
a blue-violet color
Having the color of, pertaining to, or derived from, indigo
It is a dark blue earthy substance, tasteless and odorless, with a copper-violet luster when rubbed
{s} having a dark violet-blue color
indigo bunting
A blue bunting of North America, (scientific name): (Passerina cyanea)
indigo buntings
plural form of indigo bunting
indigo blue
{i} dark violet-blue color
indigo broom
much-branched erect herb with bright yellow flowers; distributed from Massachusetts to Florida
indigo bunting
A small common finch (Passerina cyanea) of North and Central America, the male of which has deep blue plumage
indigo bunting
small deep blue North American bunting
indigo plant
Any shrub or herb in the genus Indigofera of the pea family (see legume). Most occur in warm climates and are silky or hairy. The leaves are usually divided into smaller leaflets. Small rose, purple, or white flowers are borne in spikes or clusters. The fruit is a pod. Some species, particularly I. sumatrana and I. arrecta, were once an important source of indigo dye, a deep navy blue
indigo snake
{i} large nonvenomous indigo colored snake that preys on small animals found from south United States to South America
indigo snake
large dark-blue nonvenomous snake that invades burrows; found in southern North America and Mexico
indigo snake
A nonvenomous bluish-black snake (Drymarchon corais) of the southern United States and northern Mexico. Nonvenomous snake (Drymarchon corais, family Colubridae) found from the southeastern U.S. to Brazil. The largest snake in the U.S., it has a record length of 9.2 ft (2.8 m). In the U.S. it is blue-black; southward it may have brown foreparts, and in the tropics it is often called brown snake. It kills small vertebrates, including venomous snakes, by crushing with its jaws and the weight of its coils, but is not a constrictor. In defense it hisses and vibrates its tail but rarely strikes. It may share a burrow with a gopher tortoise, for which it is often called gopher snake. It has been listed as an endangered species since the 1970s
ındigo
{n} a plant used for dying blue
bastard indigo
East Indian shrub
blue false indigo
wild indigo of the eastern United States having racemes of blue flowers
eastern indigo snake
a variety of indigo snake
false indigo
any of several plants of the genus Baptisia
false indigo
dense shrub of moist riverbanks and flood plains of the eastern United States having attractive fragrant foliage and dense racemes of dark purple flowers
false indigo
an erect to spreading hairy shrub of the Pacific coast of the United States having racemes of red to indigo flowers dense shrub of moist riverbanks and flood plains of the eastern United States having attractive fragrant foliage and dense racemes of dark purple flowers
false indigo
an erect to spreading hairy shrub of the Pacific coast of the United States having racemes of red to indigo flowers
white false indigo
erect or spreading herb having racemes of creamy white flowers; the eastern United States
wild indigo
Any of several North American plants of the genus Baptisia, especially B. tinctoria, having trifoliate leaves and bright yellow flowers
wild indigo
any of several plants of the genus Baptisia
indigo

    Hyphenation

    in·di·go

    Turkish pronunciation

    îndıgō

    Pronunciation

    /ˈəndəˌgō/ /ˈɪndəˌɡoʊ/

    Etymology

    () From Ancient Greek Ἰνδικὸν (“Indian dye”).
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