tint
IPA: tˈɪnt
noun
- A slight coloring.
- A pale or faint tinge of any color; especially, a variation of a color obtained by adding white (contrast shade)
- A color considered with reference to other very similar colors.
- A shaded effect in engraving, produced by the juxtaposition of many fine parallel lines.
- (automotive, informal) A vehicle window that has been darkened to conceal the occupant.
verb
- (transitive, intransitive) To shade, to color.
Advertisement
Examples of "tint" in Sentences
- The skin on the stomach has a blue tint.
- It is a yellowish tint of the color tangerine.
- That green tint is the actual color of the sleeve.
- A good all around tint is rose or a lighter amber.
- The name is derived from the reddish tint of its sandbanks.
- Windows are of handmade opalescent glass tinted pale yellow.
- This is the tint of the color that is used in interior design.
- So the amber tint is awesome you can see straight to the bottom
- The surface of the ceramic is known for its distinctive red tint.
- The cover of the CD2 single is tinted differently than the CD1 single.
- The white balance is just a change of the tint made to the overall picture.
- The blue tint of water is intrinsic and is a property of the chemical itself.
- The transparency effect of the terminal window looks great and I love the colour (the same effect with the same tint is used for tooltips).
- The placing your figures in half tint is sacrificing them to the landscape, which I acknowledge is beautiful, — but the figures ought to be principal.
- Simply make the measurements in centimeters, choose the thickness and tint from a sample display on the counter, and in a few minutes you have perfect panes.
- When you can manage to tint and gradate tenderly with the pencil point, get a good large alphabet, and try to _tint_ the letters into shape with the pencil point.