The first is of a pale rose, the second of a bright crimson.
Its flowers are large and full, and of a pale rose-color and globular form.
Among the prettiest forms is one which is pale rose or lilac, blending to white at the center, delicately striate with purple-dotted lines, and having a rich purple spot in the center.
White, pale rose or violet; seven to ten lines long.
Though not very common, it is widely distributed, occurring in nearly all parts of Great Britain.
Even more common, in most places, is the Corn Feverfew or Scentless Mayweed (M.
The gelatinous substance of which the body of the Medusa is formed is sometimes colourless and limpid as crystal; sometimes it is opaline, and occasionally of a bright blue or pale rose colour.
The blood of the snail is of a pale rose colour, slightly tinted with blue.
Flowers: male in short crowded clusters, pale purple; female in clusters of 2 or 3 on stout ascending stems, pale rose color.
Was it for a pale rose-leaf to brave that fell wind that tore the waves into spindrift, and howled through the lonely chasms of Ben-an-Sloich?
You were not afraid of the Macleods then; you had no fear of the rude Northern people; you said they would not crush a pale Rose-leaf.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "pale rose" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.