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sallow
1[ sal-oh ]
sallow
2[ sal-oh ]
noun
- any of several shrubby Old World willows, especially Salix atrocinerea or the pussy willow, S. caprea.
sallow
1/ ˈsæləʊ /
noun
- any of several small willow trees, esp the Eurasian Salix cinerea ( common sallow ), which has large catkins that appear before the leaves
- a twig or the wood of any of these trees
sallow
2/ ˈsæləʊ /
adjective
- (esp of human skin) of an unhealthy pale or yellowish colour
verb
- tr to make sallow
Derived Forms
- ˈsallowy, adjective
- ˈsallowness, noun
- ˈsallowly, adverb
- ˈsallowish, adjective
Other Words From
- sallow·ish adjective
- sallow·ness noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of sallow1
Origin of sallow2
Word History and Origins
Origin of sallow1
Origin of sallow2
Example Sentences
On her best days, she was sallow, but this evening she wasn’t as pea-green as her dress.
The video then shows still pictures of a young woman of similar appearance lying, looking sallow and with her eyes closed, on a blood-stained bedsheet.
His skin is sallow, marked with age spots.
The canvas, 5 feet square, imposes the sentiment in a stack of crisp white words over snow-covered mountain scenery, the sky a sallow yellow fading upward into bilious green.
La Llorona’s gaunt face shriveled up like a pale raisin, becoming sallow and ashen, creased by centuries of wrinkles and dark blotches.
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