white

white - adjective

  • Having the color of new snow or milk
  • Light or pale in color
  • Free from color : clear, transparent
  • Lustrous pale gray : silvery
Source: Merriam-Webster Dictionary API
"lips white with fear"

SpellingJoy score for white

SpellingJoy Gematria

🎓 Scholar
131

Letter Values

W
26
H
9
I
9
T
21
E
8

Etymology

Old English

Middle English whit, white, going back to Old English hwīt "white, bright, shining," going back to Germanic *hwīta- (whence also Old Frisian hwīt, hwītt, wīt, wit "white," Old Saxon hwīt "white, bright," Middle Dutch wit, witt "white," Middle Low German wit, witte, Old High German hwīz, wīz, Old Icelandic hvítr, Gothic ƕeits), probably going back to Indo-European *ḱu̯ei̯t-nó-, whence also, with zero-grade, Sanskrit śvítnaḥ "whitish," and without suffixal -n- Sanskrit áśvait "(it) brightened," śvitāná- "brightening," śvetáḥ "white, bright," Avestan spaēta-, Old Church Slavic světŭ "light, radiance," svěštǫ, světiti "to shine, give light," Lithuanian šviečiù, šviẽsti "to shine, shine a light (for)"; (sense 2c) from the stereotypical and racist association of good character with northern European descent; (sense 6) from the association of white with royalist and counterrevolutionary causes, perhaps originally from its use in the cockades and flags of the Bourbon dynasty in France and the Jacobites in Britain

Word family

whiteness, whiter, whitest

Found in Lyrics

"White Wedding"

by Billy Idol

1982

"It's a nice day for a white wedding"

Context: Rock hit with white in title

"Can't Get Enough of Your Love"

by Barry White

1974

"I can't get enough of your love, babe"

Context: Soul classic by Barry White