Black & decker 12v dustbuster car vac

  • ebony
  • jet
  • obsidian
  • onyx
  • pitch-black
  • raven
  • charcoal
  • coal-black
  • inklike
  • inky
  • sable

  • sunless
  • unlighted
  • unlit
  • pitch-dark
  • starless
  • stygian
  • clouded
  • dusky
  • murky
  • shadowy
  • dismal
  • gloomy
  • depressing
  • depressive
  • dispiriting
  • distressing
  • bleak
  • doleful
  • dreary
  • funereal
  • grim
  • hopeless
  • horrible
  • lugubrious
  • mournful
  • morose
  • ominous
  • oppressive
  • sad
  • somber
  • dirty
  • soiled
  • stained
  • begrimed
  • blackened
  • dingy
  • filthy
  • foul
  • grimy
  • grubby
  • muddy
  • spotted
  • impure
  • nasty
  • sooty
  • squalid
  • unclean
  • uncleanly
  • angered
  • angry
  • annoyed
  • cross
  • furious
  • irate
  • irritated
  • vexed
  • menacing
  • hostile
  • sour
  • threatening
  • enraged
  • incensed
  • moody
  • resentful
  • bad
  • evil
  • mean
  • vile
  • villainous
  • wicked
  • diabolical
  • fiendish
  • iniquitous
  • nefarious
  • atrocious
  • sunny
  • bright
  • happy
  • hopeful
  • optimistic
  • clean
  • unsoiled
  • friendly
  • nice
  • pleasant
  • good
  • virtuous

Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.

TRY USING black

See how your sentence looks with different synonyms.

How to use black in a sentence

Under the long lashes of low lids a pair of eyes black and insolent set off the haughty lines of her scarlet lips.

ST. MARTIN'S SUMMERRAFAEL SABATINI

SYNONYM OF THE DAY

OCTOBER 26, 1985

  • black
  • dark
  • dusky
  • inky

  • black
  • cheerless
  • comfortless
  • dark
  • discouraging
  • disheartening
  • dismal
  • drear
  • dreary
  • funereal
  • gloomy
  • grim
  • hard
  • harsh
  • hopeless
  • joyless
  • lonely
  • melancholy
  • mournful
  • oppressive
  • sad
  • somber
  • unpromising

  • black
  • cheerless
  • comfortless
  • dark
  • discouraging
  • disheartening
  • dismal
  • drear
  • dreary
  • funereal
  • gloomy
  • grim
  • hard
  • harsh
  • hopeless
  • joyless
  • lonely
  • melancholy
  • mournful
  • oppressive
  • sad
  • somber
  • unpromising

  • black
  • cheerless
  • comfortless
  • dark
  • discouraging
  • disheartening
  • dismal
  • drear
  • dreary
  • funereal
  • gloomy
  • grim
  • hard
  • harsh
  • hopeless
  • joyless
  • lonely
  • melancholy
  • mournful
  • oppressive
  • sad
  • somber
  • unpromising

  • bang up
  • batter
  • beat
  • black
  • blacken
  • blemish
  • bung up
  • contuse
  • crush
  • damage
  • deface
  • do a number on
  • injure
  • mar
  • mark
  • pound
  • pulverize
  • wound
  • zing

  • austere
  • black
  • bleak
  • blue
  • comfortless
  • dark
  • dejected
  • dejecting
  • depressed
  • desolate
  • despondent
  • disconsolate
  • dismal
  • dispiriting
  • dolorous
  • drab
  • draggy
  • drearisome
  • dreary
  • dull
  • forlorn
  • funereal
  • gloomy
  • grim
  • in the dumps
  • jarring
  • joyless
  • melancholy
  • miserable
  • mopey
  • mournful
  • oppressive
  • sad
  • somber
  • sorrowful
  • sullen
  • tenebrific
  • uncomfortable
  • wintry
  • woebegone
  • woeful

Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.

What is the real meaning of black?

The color black represents strength, seriousness, power, and authority. Black is a formal, elegant, and prestigious color. Authoritative and powerful, the color black can evoke strong emotions and too much black can be overwhelming. In heraldry, black is the symbol of grief.

What is other names for black?

synonyms for black.
ebony..
obsidian..
pitch-black..
raven..
charcoal..
coal-black..

Is black a real color?

And many do consider black to be a color, because you combine other pigments to create it on paper. But in a technical sense, black and white are not colors, they're shades. They augment colors.

How old is the word black?

black (n.) Old English blæc "the color black," also "ink," from noun use of black (adj.). It is attested from late 14c. as "dark spot in the pupil of the eye." The meaning "dark-skinned person, African" is from 1620s (perhaps late 13c., and blackamoor is from 1540s).