Table of Contents
1. dye
verb. ['ˈdaɪ'] color with dye.
Synonyms
Etymology
- deie (Middle English (1100-1500))
- deag (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
Rhymes with Dye
- adl-tabatabai
- dwi
- oversupply
- standby
- semidry
- resupply
- private-eye
- misapply
- isty
- drip-dry
- cspi
- whereby
- underly
- underlie
- overfly
- mistry
- mcfly
- lxi
- drive-by
- comply
- versailles
- thereby
- switaj
- supply
- sundai
- sri
- shanghai
- sci
- retry
- reply
How do you pronounce dye?
Pronounce dye as daɪ.
US - How to pronounce dye in American English
UK - How to pronounce dye in British English
Sentences with dye
1. Noun, singular or mass
If it is too dark, add more water, if it is too light add more dye.
2. Verb, base form
You can even dye the white chocolate first with red or pink food coloring.
3. Adjective
Spotcheck is the Magnaflux brand for dye penetration.
4. Verb, non-3rd person singular present
Cotton fibers also dye very well, offering vibrantly colored yarn.
Quotes about dye
1. Hope and reality lie in inverse proportions, inside the walls of a hospital... Doubt is like dye. Once is spreads into the fabric of excuses you've woven, you'll never get rid of the stain.
- Jodi Picoult, Lone Wolf
6. deep-dye
verb. dye thoroughly.
9. dye
noun. ['ˈdaɪ'] a usually soluble substance for staining or coloring e.g. fabrics or hair.
Synonyms
- basic color
- bromthymol blue
- vat dye
- colour
- cyanine dye
- coloring material
- radiopaque dye
- Kendal green
- sugar of lead
- fluorescein
- alizarin yellow
- quercitron
- saffranine
- color
- dyestuff
- safranine
- azo dye
- cudbear
- fluorescent dye
- substantive dye
- cochineal
- direct dye
- orchil
- vat color
- fluorochrome
- colouring material
- indigotin
- blueing
- lead acetate
- resorcinolphthalein
- fluoresceine
- basic colour
- aniline dye
- basic dye
- blue
- hair coloring
- bromothymol blue
- safranin
- tetrabromo-phenolsulfonephthalein
- woad
- acid dye
- lac dye
- Tyrian purple
- chromophore
- anil
- indigo
- bromphenol blue
- archil
- hair dye
- bluing
- Kendal
Antonyms
Etymology
- deie (Middle English (1100-1500))
- deag (Old English (ca. 450-1100))