Apple-faced (a.) Having a round, broad face, like an apple. |
Bald-faced (a.) Having a white face or a white mark on the face, as a stag. |
Bell-faced (a.) Having the striking surface convex |
Black-faced (a.) Having a black, dark, or gloomy face or aspect. |
Bold-faced (a.) Somewhat impudent |
Bold-faced (a.) Having a conspicuous or heavy face. |
Chub-faced (a.) Having a plump, short face. |
Copper-faced (a.) Faced or covered with copper |
Cream-faced (a.) White or pale, as the effect of fear, or as the natural complexion. |
Dark (a.) Destitute, or partially destitute, of light |
Dark (a.) Not clear to the understanding |
Dark (a.) Destitute of knowledge and culture |
Dark (a.) Evincing black or foul traits of character |
Dark (a.) Foreboding evil |
Dark (a.) Deprived of sight |
Dark (n.) Absence of light |
Dark (n.) The condition of ignorance |
Dark (n.) A dark shade or dark passage in a painting, engraving, or the like |
Dark (v. t.) To darken to obscure. |
Dog-faced (a.) Having a face resembling that of a dog. |
Double-faced (a.) Having two faces designed for use |
Double-faced (a.) Deceitful |
Dough-faced (a.) Easily molded |
Faced (imp. & p. p.) of Face |
Faced (a.) Having (such) a face, or (so many) faces |
False-faced (a.) Hypocritical. |
Fiber-faced (a.) Alt. of Fibre-faced |
Fibre-faced (a.) Having a visible fiber embodied in the surface of |
Glass-faced (a.) Mirror-faced |
Half-faced (a.) Showing only part of the face |
Janus-faced (a.) Double-faced |
Lean-faced (a.) Having a thin face. |
Lean-faced (a.) slender or narrow |
Moon-faced (a.) Having a round, full face. |
Mulberry-faced (a.) Having a face of a mulberry color, or blotched as if with mulberry stains. |
Pitch-dark (a.) Dark as a pitch |
Pitch-faced (a.) Having the arris defined by a line beyond which the rock is cut away, so as to give nearly true edges |
Platter-faced (a.) Having a broad, flat face. |
Pug-faced (a.) Having a face like a monkey or a pug |
Putty-faced (a.) White-faced |
Quarry-faced (a.) Having a face left as it comes from the quarry and not smoothed with the chisel or point |
Sheep-faced (a.) Over-bashful |
Smock-faced (a.) Having a feminine countenance or complexion |
Tallow-faced (a.) Having a sickly complexion |
Weasel-faced (a.) Having a thin, sharp face, like a weasel. |
Whey-faced (a.) Having a pale or white face, as from fright. |
Wizen-faced (a.) Having a shriveled, thin, withered face. |
dark adaptation | the process of adjusting the eyes to low levels of illumination, cones adapt first, rods continue to adapt for up to four hours |
dark ground illumination dark field illumination | a form of microscopic examination of living material by scattered light, specimens appear luminous against a dark background |
dark-eyed junco slateolored junco Junco hyemalis | common North American junco having grey plumage and eyes with dark brown irises |
bald-faced hornet white-faced hornet Vespula maculata | North American hornet |
dark horse | a racehorse about which little is known |
dark lantern bull's-eye | a lantern with a single opening and a sliding panel that can be closed to conceal the light |
sunglasses dark glasses shades | spectacles that are darkened or polarized to protect the eyes from the glare of the sun, he was wearing a pair of mirrored shades |
ultramicroscope dark-field microscope | light microscope that uses scattered light to show particles too small to see with ordinary microscopes |
dark red | a red color that reflects little light |
dark blue navy navy blue | a dark shade of blue |
dark darkness | an unenlightened state, he was in the dark concerning their intentions, his lectures dispelled the darkness |
dark comedy | a comedy characterized by grim or satiric humor, a comedy having gloomy or disturbing elements |
bittersweet chocolate semi-sweet chocolate dark chocolate | chocolate liquor with cocoa butter and small amounts of sugar and vanilla, lecithin is usually added |
dark meat | the flesh of the legs of fowl used as food |
dark bread whole wheat bread whole meal bread brown bread | bread made with whole wheat flour |
darkness dark shadow | an unilluminated area, he moved off into the darkness |
dark horse | a political candidate who is not well known but could win unexpectedly |
dark darkness | absence of light or illumination |
iniquity wickedness darkness dark | absence of moral or spiritual values, the powers of darkness |
dark matter | (cosmology) a hypothetical form of matter that is believed to make uppercent of the universe, it is invisible (does not absorb or emit light) and does not collide with atomic particles but exerts gravitational force |
night nighttime dark | the time after sunset and before sunrise while it is dark outside |
Middle Ages Dark Ages | the period of history between classical antiquity and the Italian Renaissance |
dark | not giving performances, closed, the theater is dark on Mondays |
audacious barefaced bodacious bald-faced brassy brazen brazen-faced insolent | unrestrained by convention or propriety, an audacious trick to pull, a barefaced hypocrite, the most bodacious display of tourism this side of Anaheim- Los Angeles Times, bald-faced lies, brazen arrogance, the modern world with its quick material successes and insolent belief in the boundless possibilities of progress- Bertrand Russell |
beardless smooth-faced | lacking hair on the face, a smooth-faced boy of years |
dark-haired dark-coated | covered with dark hair |
faced | having a face or facing especially of a specified kind or number, often used in combination, a neatly faced terrace |
baby-faced | having a youthful-looking face |
bald-faced | (of animals) having white markings on the face |
Janus-faced two-faced | having two faces--one looking to the future and one to the past, Janus the two-faced god |
long-faced | having a face longer than the usual |
moon-faced round-faced | having a round face |
pale-faced | having a pale face |
pug-faced | having the flat wrinkled face of a pug dog |
sad-faced | having a face with a sad expression, the sad-faced clown |
sweet-faced | having a pleasing face or one showing a sweet disposition, a sweet-faced child |
colored coloured dark dark-skinned non-white | having skin rich in melanin pigments, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, dark-skinned peoples |
dark | brunet (used of hair or skin or eyes), dark eyes |
dark-haired black-haired brown-haired | having hair of a dark color, a dark-haired beauty |
dark-skinned dusky swart swarthy | naturally having skin of a dark color, a dark-skinned beauty, gold earrings gleamed against her dusky cheeks, a smile on his swarthy face, `swart' is archaic |
dark | devoid of or deficient in light or brightness, shadowed or black, sitting in a dark corner, a dark day, dark shadows, dark as the inside of a black cat |
black pitch-black pitch-dark | extremely dark, a black moonless night, through the pitch-black woods, it was pitch-dark in the cellar |
b blue dark dingy disconsolate dismal gloomy grim sorry drab drear dreary b | causing dejection, a blue day, the dark days of the war, a week of rainy depressing weather, a disconsolate winter landscape, the first dismal dispiriting days of November, a dark gloomy day, grim rainy weather |
brown brownish chocolate-brown dark-brown | of a color similar to that of wood or earth |
dark-blue | of a dark shade of blue |
green greenish light-green dark-green | of the color between blue and yellow in the color spectrum, similar to the color of fresh grass, a green tree, green fields, green paint |
oxford-grey oxford-gray dark-grey dark-gray | of a dark shade of grey |
crimson red reddened red-faced flushed | (especially of the face) reddened or suffused with or as if with blood from emotion or exertion, crimson with fury, turned red from exertion, with puffy reddened eyes, red-faced and violent, flushed (or crimson) with embarrassment |
dark-colored dark-coloured dusky-colored dusky-coloured | having a dark color |
dark | (used of color) having a dark hue, dark green, dark glasses, dark colors like wine red or navy blue |