scarlet

English dictionary entry

Meanings

noun
  1. A brilliant red colour sometimes tinged with orange.
  2. Cloth of a scarlet color.
adj
  1. Of a bright red colour.
  2. Sinful or whorish.
  3. Blushing; embarrassed or mortified.
verb
  1. To dye or tinge (something) with scarlet.
name
  1. A female given name from English, a modern variant of Scarlett, or from the common noun scarlet.

Pronunciation

/ˈskɑɹlɪt/ /ˈskɑːlɪt/ /ˈskɐːlət/ LL-Q1860 (eng)-Vealhurl-scarlet.wav

Word forms

scarlet scarlets more scarlet most scarlet scarleting scarleted

Etymology

From Middle English scarlet, scarlat, borrowed from Old French escarlate (“a type of cloth”), from Medieval Latin scarlātum (“scarlet cloth”), of uncertain origin. This was long thought to derive from Classical Persian سقرلات (saqirlāt, “a warm woollen cloth”), but the Persian word (first attested in the 1290s) is now thought to be from Arabic سِقِلَّات (siqillāt), denoting very expensive, luxury silks dyed scarlet-red using the exceptionally expensive dye, first attested around the ninth century. The most obvious route for the Arabic word siqillāt to have entered the Romance languages would be via the Arabic-speaking Iberian region of al-Andalus, particularly Almería, where kermes was produced extensively; compare especially the dialectal form سِقِرْلَاط (siqirlāṭ). The word then came to be used of woollen cloth dyed with the same dye. The Arabic word may itself be derived from Byzantine Greek σιγιλλᾶτον (sigillâton), from Latin sigillātum (“a type of fabric”, literally “sealed; sealing”) .

This entry uses open data from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA/GFDL). Word forms are used for search and are not indexed as separate pages.