Kurt's not the only Cerulean Warbler
Nov. 8th, 2011 08:23 amThe photo was takenby MDF and used through a Creative Commons attribution-share alike license. I found it on Wikipedia.
When I saw this picture, I was a little concerned by how the color is almost azure, with only a hint of green - but I calmed down when I read Wikipedia's current definition of cerulean: "Cerulean, also spelled caerulean, may be applied to a range of colors from deep blue, sky-blue, bright blue or azure color through greenish blue colors." Not that Wikipedia is a complete authority on these matters, but I will trust it here because I just like the idea of cerulean being so versatile. Like my Kurt.
(I am just going to ignore buzzkill Merriam-Webster, which defines cerulean as "resembling the blue of the sky.")
no subject
Date: 2011-11-08 04:20 pm (UTC)Shoo, Merriam-Webster. Colors make such a complexely beautiful puzzle; they vary in so many hues, values and saturation degree, they become hard to define at times - not to mention that it is a subjective experience in itself.
And the OED says ...
Date: 2011-11-09 03:04 am (UTC)cerulean - [from Latin caeruleus sky-blue, sea-blue (or sea-green) from caelum sky, heaven] (Of) the colour of the cloudless sky, deep blue, azure.
So the root of the word, caelum, does not support me; but what it came to mean in caeruleus does. And yet, if the OED is describing the current English meaning correctly - well, I am bereft. I need green to be in there, dangit! Maybe I need to go to the full OED and see what it says.
Re: And the OED says ...
Date: 2011-11-09 02:08 pm (UTC)