In the same way extract of logwood tinges the bones of young pigeons purple.
Taste, persistently bitter, and when chewedtinges the saliva yellow.
It is also heavier, tinges the saliva of an orange-red hue, and when pulverised the powder is redder than that of Russian rhubarb.
Its taste is bitter, slightly astringent, and sub-acid; and when chewed it feels gritty, and tinges the saliva of a beautiful yellow colour.
In either hand she holds a rose; Each doth delicious odour spread: Each with the liveliest colour glows; One tinges morn, one eve with red.
And when the summer’s lengthen’d ray Tinges our hills, thine be the toil To plant fresh flowers on Svithiod’s soil.
Madder, when given to animals tinges the surface of their bones with a red hue.
Such a color as tingesthe clouds at sunset or at dawn came over the countenance of Diana thus taken by surprise.
The medium lying between the eye and the object seen, tinges that object with its colour, as the blueness of the atmosphere makes the distant mountains appear blue and red glass makes objects seen beyond it, look red.
Only the red light a b falls there and tinges the shadow of a red hue and so a ruddy shadow appears on the background of mingled red and blue.
The illusive appearance of the world, presents itself to our sight, like the variegated hues of the sky, it is therefore by our ignoring of it, that we may be enabled to wipe off those tinges from our minds.
It is only the vitiated understanding that dwells upon the beauties of creation, as the vitiated eye sight looks upon the various tinges in the sky.
The soul like a crystal stone is wholly blank in itself, it is only the imaginative mind, that tinges it in different shades and colours).
Those were troublous times and he saw much of their misery, and their sadness tinges his great poem.
A distilled Water that tinges the Cheeks a beautiful Carnation Hue.
A Water that tingesthe Cheeks a beautiful Carnation Hue 76 91.
Others only use a Red Sponge, which tinges the cheeks of a fine carnation colour.
Every passion, indeed every inclination and aversion, tinges the objects of knowledge with its colour.
The contemplation of mortality tinges the song with a momentary sadness, which melts into the pensive, yet cheerful, assurance that mortality has an accompanying blessing, in that it makes a plea for pity from a Father's heart.
The thought of evil-doers tinges most of this section.
Spirits of wine has a peculiar tendency to attract the juice which tinges plants, and becomes coloured with it often in a very permanent manner.
She soon re-appears; tired at last with convulsing the element; which she tinges with her blood, she dies, and floats on the surface.
This society I would fain examine, at least such as it appears in the middle provinces; if it does not afford that variety of tinges and gradations which may be observed in Europe, we have colours peculiar to ourselves.
The night has passed, the day-star fades from sight, And morning's softest tint of rose and gold Tinges the east and tips the mountain-tops.
When dawning day tinges with rosy light The snow-capped peaks of Himalaya's chain, The people are astir.
This acid tingesthe skin of a yellow colour, which does not disappear till the epidermis be changed.
At this period we may with probability fix the invention of local colour, and tone; which, though strictly speaking it be neither the light nor the shade, is regulated by the medium which tinges both.
The evening-freshness of an oriental day tinges every part; the medium of Agostino partakes too much of the fumigated inside of a Catholic chapel.
Like the bow, whose long arch tinges the heavens, formed by sunbeams reflected from the shower, [Footnote: This correct description of the rainbow is literally translated from Ovid.
The air was intensely cold, and the iron frameworks against the last tingesof sunset and the red and white lights were now all there was to see of our port of discharge.
The/ light of the fire tinges every thing of a reddish yellow; but this will hardly appear evident, if we do not make the comparison with the daylight.
These shadows will vary from the lights in colour, because on that side the object receives a reflected light hue from the azure of the air, which tinges that part; and this is particularly observable in white objects.
This happens when the light falls upon the object (we will suppose from the East), and tinges that side with its own colour.
The setting sun is a beautiful and magnificent object when it tinges with its colour all the great buildings of towns, villages, and the top of high trees in the country.
It tinges the saliva a bright red and acts as a powerful stimulant to the digestive organs and salivary glands; when swallowed it causes giddiness and other unpleasant symptoms in persons unaccustomed to its use.
He tinges the heavenly fount with his weeping, He brightens the censer's flame with his sighs.
Its tender memory shapes and tinges almost every act of her working, everyday life.
Now a ruddy colouring tinges the pale grey of the eastern sky, to be followed by broad rays in delicate blues and greens that strike boldly for the zenith.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "tinges" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.