WOTD – 3 August 2010 English Wikipedia has an article on: ochre Wikipedia From Old French ocre and its source Latin ōchra, from Ancient Greek ὤχρα (ṓkhra...
(countable and uncountable, plural gold ochres) A dark yellowish color, a yellowish shade of ochre or olive. gold ochre: ochre red ochre Appendix:Colors...
ocrer to ochre (cover with ochre) Conjugation of ocrer (see also Appendix:French verbs) “ocrer”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized...
uran-ochre (uncountable) (mineralogy) A yellow, earthy incrustation, consisting essentially of the oxide of uranium, but more or less impure. Part or...
/ˈəʊkə/ Rhymes: -əʊkə(ɹ) ocher (plural ochers) Alternative spelling of ochre 1973 July, Melville Bell Grosvenor, “Homeward with Ulysses”, in National...
knowledge: The colours necessary for dead colouring are: common white, light ochre, brown ochre, burnt umber, Indian red, ivory black, and Prussian blue....
for it the colors used were aureolin, cobalt, crimson-lake, yellow ochre, brown ochre, raw sienna, burnt sienna, light-red […] aureolin: aureole oriole...
(countable and uncountable, plural okers) (mineralogy) Obsolete form of ochre. oker (plural okers) Alternative form of oka (“unit of measurement”) 1837...
English Wikipedia has an article on: Soil horizon Wikipedia ochric (not comparable) (soil science) Either too thin, too light in colour, or too low in...
(chemistry) Of, pertaining to, or containing uranium uranitic ore uranitic ochre “uranitic”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass...