pale
1 Americanadjective
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(of a person or a person's skin)
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light-colored or lacking in color.
a pale complexion; his pale face; a pale child.
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lacking the usual intensity of color due to fear, illness, stress, etc..
She looked pale and unwell when we visited her in the nursing home.
- Antonyms:
- ruddy
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of a low degree of chroma, saturation, or purity; approaching white or gray.
pale yellow.
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not bright or brilliant; dim.
the pale moon.
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faint or feeble; lacking vigor.
a pale protest.
verb (used without object)
verb (used with object)
noun
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a stake or picket, as of a fence.
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an enclosing or confining barrier; enclosure.
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an enclosed area.
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outside the pale of his jurisdiction.
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a district or region within designated bounds.
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(initial capital letter)
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Also called Irish Pale. Also called English Pale. a district in eastern Ireland included in the Angevin Empire of King Henry II and his successors.
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Also called Pale of Settlement. the territories in the Russian Empire in which Jews were allowed to live.
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Heraldry. an ordinary in the form of a broad vertical stripe at the center of an escutcheon.
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Shipbuilding. a shore used inside to support the deck beams of a hull under construction.
idioms
adjective
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lacking brightness of colour; whitish
pale morning light
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(of a colour) whitish; produced by a relatively small quantity of colouring agent
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dim or wan
the pale stars
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feeble
a pale effort
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a euphemism for White
verb
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to make or become pale or paler; blanch
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to lose superiority or importance (in comparison to)
her beauty paled before that of her hostess
noun
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a wooden post or strip used as an upright member in a fence
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an enclosing barrier, esp a fence made of pales
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an area enclosed by a pale
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a sphere of activity within which certain restrictions are applied
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heraldry an ordinary consisting of a vertical stripe, usually in the centre of a shield
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outside the limits of social convention
verb
Related Words
Pale, pallid, wan imply an absence of color, especially from the human countenance. Pale implies a faintness or absence of color, which may be natural when applied to things, the pale blue of a violet, but when used to refer to the human face usually means an unnatural and often temporary absence of color, as arising from sickness or sudden emotion: pale cheeks. Pallid , limited mainly to the human countenance, implies an excessive paleness induced by intense emotion, disease, or death: the pallid lips of the dying man. Wan implies a sickly paleness, as after a long illness: wan and thin; the suggestion of weakness may be more prominent than that of lack of color: a wan smile.
Other Word Forms
- palely adverb
- paleness noun
Etymology
Origin of pale1
First recorded in 1250–1300; Middle English, from Middle French, from Latin pallidus pallid
Origin of pale2
First recorded in 1300–50; Middle English pal(e), paele, from Old French pal, pel “stake,” from Latin pālus “wooden pole, wooden peg, stake”; peel 3; pole 1 ( def. )
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.