Definitions
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
- n. Any of various shrubs of the genus Syringa, especially S. vulgaris, widely cultivated for its clusters of fragrant purplish or white flowers.
- n. A pale to light or moderate purple.
Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
- n. A shrub of the genus Syringa. See Syringa. The common lilacs are S. vulgaris and S. Persica, with their varieties; they abound, especially the former, as ornamental plants, cultivated for their beauty and fragrance. S.vulgaris is the larger species, having heart-shaped leaves and large thyrsiform clusters of purple flowers—the ordinary purple lilac or Scotch lilac, or, with white flowers, the common white lilac. There is also a blue-flowered variety. S. Persica, the Persian lilac, is a smaller, slender shrub, with looser panicles and pale flowers, blooming later, and also having a white variety. Countess Josika's lilac, S. Josikæa, discovered by the Countess von Josika in Transylvania, is a tall shrub with elliptical-lanceolate wrinkled leaves and bluish-purple scentless flowers. The Himalayan lilac, S. Emodi, is large, with dense panicles, but is not preferred to the common lilac. The lilac was formerly called
pipe-tree or pipe-privets, and blue-pipe, on account of the large pith that could easily be bored out of the straight shoots to make pipe-stems. The common lilac has febrifugal properties. (Seelilacine .) An oil is extracted from it for use in perfumery. The name lilac has also been given to various plants having some resemblance to the true lilac (see phrases below). - n. The color of the common lilac-blossom; a pale-purple color. A color-disk composed of one half artificial ultramarine, one sixth Chinese vermilion, and one third white will give a lilac.
- Of the light-purple color of the flower of the common lilac.
- n. A fanciers' name for a peculiar bluish-gray color shown in the coats of some domesticated mice.
Wiktionary
- n. A large shrub of the genus Syringa, bearing white, pale pink or purple flowers.
- n. Lilac flowers.
- n. colour A pale purple colour, the colour of some lilac flowers.
- adj. colour having a pale purple colour.
GNU Webster's 1913
- n. (Bot.) A shrub of the genus Syringa. There are six species, natives of Europe and Asia. Syringa vulgaris, the common lilac, and Syringa Persica, the Persian lilac, are frequently cultivated for the fragrance and beauty of their purplish or white flowers. In the British colonies various other shrubs have this name.
- n. A light purplish color like that of the flower of the purplish lilac.
WordNet 3.0
- adj. of a pale purple color
- n. any of various plants of the genus Syringa having large panicles of usually fragrant flowers
Etymologies
- From Arabic ليلك (līlak), from Persian نیلک (nilak), from نیل (nil, "dark blue"). (Wiktionary)
- Obsolete French, from Arabic līlak, from Middle Persian nīlak, from nīl, indigo, from Sanskrit nīlī, from nīla-, dark blue. (American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition)
Examples
“Yet why, from inhaling air containing particles of lilac, should we be able to know that there is anything outside, much less that it is a flower and of a particular variety which we call lilac?”
“The early afternoon sun skipped across the thick gray braids flowing down her back; she wore a blouse rife with an ecstatic wonder of purple and lime green panels riddled with spinning wheels bathed in lilac, yellow stars, and flame-tinted diamonds.”
A Michoacan tradition: the needlework artistry of Hermelinda Reyes
“I am sending you a virtual bouquet of mountain lilac from San Diego and a fresh bouquet of rosemary to remind you of Provence!”
“At the next table sat a Moslem woman wearing a silk overall striped in lilac and purple and dull blue.”
“Whether it is sultry, as in lilac, or cool, as in lady's smocks, this mingling of fierce red and saintly blue has an elfin quality.”
“If those other shades, the troubles of life, have become too dense and shouldered out the light, so that the sick imagination sees them as crouching beasts of prey, a pilgrimage to such a tranquil place in lilac time may help to set things right again.”
“Thorny, what is the matter with Ben?" asked Miss Celia, one day, when she and her brother were alone in the "green parlor," as they called the lilac-tree walk.”
St. Nicholas Magazine for Boys and Girls, Vol. 5, July 1878, No. 9
“The lilac is nice, and I’d go for it in green as well.”
Of Leaf Mould and Other Fashion Disasters « We Don't Count Your Own Visits To Your Blog
“As the younger stems mature and flower, the height of the lilac will be at a level where you can enjoy the fragrant flowers in spring.”
The Washington Post: Knowing when to prune is crucial for dependable flower blossoms
“For small spaces try a dwarf lilac, which is easily kept at a rounded 3 to 4 feet.”
Lists
These user-created lists contain the word ‘lilac’.
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Words
phantasmagoria, eviscerate, avast, simulacrum, varicose, oblique, gestalt, ersatz, vernal, vivace, stellate, synecdoche and 330 more...
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CULI - wine-tasting adjectives
In this area of expertise nouns are frequently used as adjectives (almond, bacon, cider, diesel, fennel, fresh-cut hay, wool) or new adjectives are formed (appley, berrylike, citrusy, full-bodied, ...
acetic, acidic, aged, angular, appley, astringent, attractive, austere, berrylike, big, bitter, brawny and 511 more...
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Interesting words
A list of words that are odd or words that I have looked up.
concupiscence, brize, scree, scoria, forestaff, spanaemia, valetudinarianism, distasture, pyrethrum, laudanum, gentian, bicameral and 11184 more...
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Aromata Aromatica
Fragrant things and terms that describe them. Generic names of botanical binomials aren't capitalized if the unconventional lower case form has a useful Wordnik definition. I'm primarily seeking te...
curry leaf, tuberose, orris, moss rose, smudge stick, lavender, frangipani, sweet acacia, sweet bay, tea rose, patchouli, linaloa and 162 more...
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Of Arabic Origin
Arabic loanwords in English are words acquired directly from Arabic or else indirectly by passing from Arabic into other languages and then into English. Most entered one or more of the Romance lan...
admiral, adobe, albatross, alchemy, alcohol, alcove, alembic, alfalfa, algebra, algorism, algorithm, alidade and 181 more...
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Uncommon Colours
azure, myrtle, periwinkle, viridian, jade, emerald, lime, chartreuse, asparagus, celadon, harlequin, olive and 147 more...
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Yazhinni Spelling bee
tongue, stallion, scruple, salinity, schedule, rouge, populist, Permian, perspire, pasteurize, multitude, mournful and 227 more...
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Flora
Flowers and plants have some of the most beautiful names.
These are often the common names, as opposed to the scientific or botanical names.daffodil, gardenia, tulip, snapdragon, violet, orchid, bleeding heart, daisy, lily, lilac, narcissus, rose and 278 more...
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Ends with C but not with "-ic"
bloc, roc, arc, orc, disc, sac, xebec, havoc, bivouac, sumac, maniac, insomniac and 418 more...
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Words For Novel (Part 2)
fable, sprite, syphilitic, anvil, wonderstruck, vertigo, bridled, tufted, fettered, savvy, tweed fedora, tryst and 255 more...
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Colour Me Happy
violet, lavender, rose, eggshell, mauve, fuschia, grey, azure, almond, sienna, purple, periwinkle and 71 more...
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The Sweet Smell of...
Things that smell good.
rain, rose, cinnamon, clove, jasmine, apple, sandalwood, rexo, bamboo, bacon, maple, eucalyptus and 36 more...
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delicate girl names
anne, cecily, dahlia, petal, orchid, lilac, lise, belle, melody, grace, rose, lily and 10 more...
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Schwa-Free
Words of more than one syllable that include no schwas in their pronunciation.
(Note for pedants: some of these words have more than one pronunciation. As long as just one of the possi...decoy, ballet, survey, sashay, argon, lilac, sumac, café, princess, dildo, wordy, flighty and 30 more...
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Colors
Words for colors, including things so associated with a color that they can be used in reference to a color.
red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet, purple, navy, lavender, turquoise, chartreuse and 218 more...
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color me mauve
color words
albescent, ecru, eggshell, mauve, taupe, ochre, ashen, goldenrod, gamboge, cream, saffron, mustard and 109 more...
Tweets
Looking for tweets for lilac.

bilby
Who thought of the lilac?
'I,' dew said,
'I made up the lilac,
out of my head.'
'She made up the lilac!
Pooh!' thrilled a linnet,
and each dew-note had a
lilac in it.
- Humbert Wolfe, 'The Lilac'. Nov 12, 2008
lilacs524 my username: from Barenaked Ladies' "Lilac Girl". Feb 23, 2007