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Showing results for blanch. Search instead for lanch.
Synonyms

blanch

1 American  
[blanch, blahnch] / blæntʃ, blɑntʃ /

verb (used with object)

  1. to whiten by removing color; bleach.

    Workers were blanching linen in the sun.

  2. Cooking.

    1. to scald briefly and then drain, as peaches or almonds to facilitate removal of skins, or as rice or macaroni to separate the grains or strands.

    2. to scald or parboil (meat or vegetables) so as to whiten, remove the odor, prepare for cooking by other means, etc.

  3. Horticulture. (of the stems or leaves of plants, as celery or leeks) to whiten or prevent from becoming green by excluding light.

  4. Metallurgy.

    1. to give a white luster to (metals), as by means of acids.

    2. to coat (sheet metal) with tin.

  5. to make pale, as with sickness or fear.

    The long illness had blanched her cheeks of their natural color.


verb (used without object)

  1. to become white; turn pale.

    The very thought of going made him blanch.

blanch 2 American  
[blanch, blahnch] / blæntʃ, blɑntʃ /

verb (used with object)

  1. to force back or to one side; head off, as a deer or other quarry.


blanch British  
/ blɑːntʃ /

verb

  1. (also intr) to remove colour from, or (of colour) to be removed; whiten; fade

    the sun blanched the carpet

    over the years the painting blanched

  2. (usually intr) to become or cause to become pale, as with sickness or fear

  3. to plunge tomatoes, nuts, etc, into boiling water to loosen the skin

  4. to plunge (meat, green vegetables, etc) in boiling water or bring to the boil in water in order to whiten, preserve the natural colour, or reduce or remove a bitter or salty taste

  5. to cause (celery, chicory, etc) to grow free of chlorophyll by the exclusion of sunlight

  6. metallurgy to whiten (a metal), usually by treating it with an acid or by coating it with tin

  7. to attempt to conceal something

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Related Words

See whiten.

Other Word Forms

Etymology

Origin of blanch1

First recorded in 1300–50; Middle English bla(u)nchen, from Anglo-French, Middle French blanchir “to whiten,” derivative of blanc, blanche “white”; see blank

Origin of blanch2

First recorded in 1565–75; variant of blench 1

Explanation

To blanch is to turn pale, usually as the result of a physical or psychological shock. 19th-century literary heroines were frequently blanching — before they fainted, that is. Blanch has also taken on the more general meaning of "to cause shock" in general. A government can blanch at following through a particular reform, without the implication that an entire cabinet actually turned white. You can blanch an inanimate object, too, when you deprive it of its natural color. White toilet paper has been blanched by using bleach, for example, though environmentalists blanch at the thought.

Keep Reading on Vocabulary.com

Vocabulary lists containing blanch

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

“Reporter-source relationships can be tricky, of course, and many journalists would blanch to see their correspondence with sources made public,” she added.

From The Wall Street Journal • Nov. 15, 2025

“We didn’t blanch at the cost to come to The Mather.”

From Barron's • Oct. 26, 2025

We know them so well, which is why when the series depicts the original trio acting inexplicably or out of character, viewers blanch.

From Salon • Aug. 29, 2023

But once you’ve plunked down hundreds or thousands of dollars for seats, maybe you don’t blanch at the idea of paying more to park than to fill your gas tank.

From Los Angeles Times • Jul. 28, 2023

Some of the professional photographers, seeing him load a flash gun, would blanch, mutter, and hasten from the room.

From "Cheaper by the Dozen" by Frank B. Gilbreth Jr. and Ernestine Gilbreth Carey

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