Colourless vs Peaked - What's the difference?
colourless | peaked | Related terms |
Having little or no colour.
(of a liquid) Water white.
Lacking in interest or variety.
Sickly-looking, peaky.
* 2000, Toshio Mori and Lawson Fusao Inada, Unfinished Message: Selected Works of Toshio Mori , p. 149,
* 2001, Fred C. Feddeck, Hale Men of Fordham: Hail! , p. 17,
* 2004, Don Ecker, Past Sins , p. 276,
(peak)
Colourless is a related term of peaked.
As adjectives the difference between colourless and peaked
is that colourless is having little or no colour while peaked is having a peak or peaks or peaked can be sickly-looking, peaky.As a verb peaked is
(peak).colourless
English
(wikipedia colourless)Alternative forms
* colorless (American spelling)Adjective
(en adjective)See also
* (Colorless green ideas sleep furiously) British English formspeaked
English
Etymology 1
See peakEtymology 2
See (Etymology 2)Alternative forms
* pekidAdjective
(en adjective)- She looked peaked and tired ever since he had volunteered for the army.
- While Nixon looked peaked throughout the debate, Kennedy looked like a poised diplomat oozing confidence.
- Peck looked peaked to Williams. He was pale and appeared to be breathing in shallow gasps.