unblue
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]unblue (not comparable)
- (rare outside philosophy) Not blue.
- 1992, Susan Burmeister-Brown, Linda Davies, editors, Glimmer Train Stories:
- […] a god in an unblue sky.
- 1997, University of Arizona Dept. of English, Sonora Review:
- Soon an associational chain reaction occurs that stains blue all that has remained unblue...
- 2000, Charles Travis, Unshadowed thought: representation in thought and language:
- A philosopher, busily sorting the world into the blue and the unblue, tells us that some ink is blue. We look at the ink one way, and it looks blue.
- 2007, Barbara Blackman, Bryony Cosgrove, Judith Wright, Portrait of a friendship:
- Mind you, if they fly in downstairs, they are quite happy to settle for unblue mangoes.
Verb
[edit]unblue (third-person singular simple present unblues, present participle unblueing or unbluing, simple past and past participle unblued)
- (intransitive, rare, chiefly poetic) To cease being blue.
- (transitive, rare, chiefly poetic) To cause (something) to cease being blue; to make (something) not blue.
- 1987, Indiana Review, number 10, page 24:
- […] to clothe bodies surprised by bullets, to unblue hands frozen in ditches, […]
- 2010, Ron Dakron, Newt, →ISBN, page 26:
- They look like iced teeth where a storm unblues them.