Crossword clues for ebon
ebon
- Black, in stanzas
- Very dark, in verse
- Poetic shade
- Black, to Browning?
- Black, in an ode
- Poetically dark
- Poet's jet-black
- Poet's "black"
- Odist's deep black
- Jet-black, poetically
- Ink's color, to Browning
- Deep black, in poems
- Dark, to a poet
- Dark, in some poems
- Dark hue
- Black, to Browning
- Black, to an old poet
- Black, in romantic poetry
- Black, in old poetry
- Black, in old poems
- Black, in odes
- Black and lustrous
- Black to Byron
- Bard's word for black
- "Heaven's __ vault": Shelley
- "Heaven's __ vault, studded with stars ...": Shelley
- "... the __-coloured ink": Shak
- "... the __ blackness of the floors": Poe
- "... crafty seer, with __ wand": Pope
- Very dark, to poets
- Very black
- The Bard's black
- Shelley's descriptor of heaven
- Shakespeare's jet?
- Shade for Shelley
- Raven, to Poe
- Poetically black
- Poetical black
- Poetic color
- Poetic "black"
- Poet's jet black
- Poet's color
- Olive Black
- Old poetic black
- Like Death's wing, to Shelley
- Like Death's dart, to Shakespeare
- Jet, to a poet
- Inky black, in poetry
- Inky black of poems
- Ink color, to Shakespeare
- Hardly snow-colored, to Keats
- Deep dark black
- Deep black, poetically
- Deep black, in poesy
- Dark, to Shelley
- Dark, to Milton
- Dark, to bards
- Dark in poesy
- Color of Death's dart, in "Venus and Adonis"
- Black, way old
- Black, to the Bard
- Black, to Poe
- Black, to Mr. Fancy-Pants
- Black, to a sonneteer
- Black, in medieval times
- Black, if you're 500
- Black, if you're 475
- Black, fancy
- Black in verse
- Black in 1492
- Black to a poet
- Black poetically
- "Whose radiant eyes your __ brows adorn": Dryden
- "Rouse up revenge from ___ den...": Shak
- "Of __ curls on calmed brows": E.B. Browning
- "Heaven's ___ vault, / Studded with stars ...": Shelley
- "Heaven's __ vault . . .": Shelley
- "By a swan's __ bill": Keats
- "Bone" anagram
- "...Death's ___ dart, to strike him dead": Shakespeare
- "... that draweth from my snow-white pen the __-coloured ink": Shak
- "... from my snow-white pen the __-coloured ink": Shak
- "... from my snow-white pen the ___-coloured ink" ("Love's Labour's Lost")
- Black shade
- Dark, poetically
- Lustrous black, poetically
- Bard's black hue
- Sable
- Poet's black
- Like some piano keys
- Black, to Blake
- Dark, to Donne
- Inky, to Keats
- Black, in poetry
- Ink's color, to Shakespeare
- Reflecting no light
- Dark, to poets
- Jet black, old-style
- Deep black, in poetry
- Coal-black
- Shade of black
- Raven-colored, to Poe
- Dark, in verse
- Black, poetically
- Black, to poets of old
- Like ink, to Shakespeare
- Like japanned wood
- Black, to bards
- Like heaven's vault, in a Shelley poem
- Black, in verse
- Like some keys
- Like death's dart, in Shakespeare
- Like ink, poetically
- Ink-colored, in Shakespeare
- Black as night, poetically
- Like black piano keys
- Dark black, to Keats
- Shade of a swan's bill in a Keats poem
- Black, to a bard
- Colored like ink in "Love's Labour's Lost"
- Poetic black
- "Heaven's ___ vault, / Studded with stars unutterably bright": Shelley
- Quite dark
- Poetic hue
- Inky, poetically
- Black, in poesy
- Dark, in poesy
- Black, to 38 Across
- Like the Styx
- Black, to Byron
- Extremely dark
- Very dark, to Shelley
- Black: Poetic
- "Psychic Warfare . . . " author
- "Heaven's ___ vault . . . ": Shelley
- Hardwood tree
- Color of the eight ball
- Deep black, to a poet
- Poetic dark hue
- Dark, to Keats
- Wood color
- Pacific atoll
- Very dark black, poetically
- More than dusky
- Bone anagram
- Adjective for the Styx
- Very dark in colour
- Wood regularly red-brown
- Speech's trouble - you can see through it
- Black, to a poet
- Karaoke selection
- Black, in a sonnet
- Black hue
- Black, in poems
- Black, as piano keys (var.)
- Piano key wood, poetically
- Jet-black, in verse
- Blackest black
- Black, in some poems
- Black, in poetic circles
- Deep black, in verse
- Poet's deep black
- Dark color
- Blake's black
- Black, romantically
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Ebon \Eb"on\, n.
Ebony. [Poetic] ``Framed of ebon and ivory.''
--Sir W. Scott.
Ebon \Eb"on\, a.
Consisting of ebony.
-
Like ebony, especially in color; black; dark.
Night, sable goddess! from her ebon throne.
--Young.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
early 15c., "ebony wood, ebony tree," from Old French ebene or directly from Latin ebenus (see ebony). As an adjective, "made of ebony," from 1590s. Figurative sense of "dark, black" is from 1590s; in some cases a poetic shortening of ebony.
Wiktionary
a. 1 (context poetic English) Made of ebony. 2 (context poetic English) Black in colour. n. ''(now poetic)'' ebony; an ebony tree.
WordNet
adj. very dark black [syn: ebony]
Usage examples of "ebon".
Ebon Rih, meeting with the Queens who ruled the Rihlander Blood villages of Doun and Agio, and talking to the council members who ran the larger landen villages.
The dead man was not an Indian, but a black man, a brawny ebon giant, clad, like the red men, in a bark loin clout, with a crest of parrot feathers on his head.
Behind them, the two troops of the Ebon Spur mounted their black-horned war bulls and formed their lines, the Black Helms of Most High Haroun to the left of the road and the Purple Lancers of His Deadliness Jabbar to the right.
Then Vidal Dhu, unmistakable in his ebon armor, rode his sweating horse halfway up the staircase, paused there, raised his hand, and a silence fell over all of them.
It was the sky here, dark, heavy and menacing, showing no star as it ebon folds enwrapped this grim city.
Her gown was woven of somber autumn foliage, yellow, gridelin, and russet, and a stephane with an ebon gem was on her brow.
I could have wished she had used a little powder, but Esther was jealous of her ebon tresses, which displayed the whiteness of her skin to admiration.
With a clownish skip of his black, scaly feet, and a show-offish swerve of his dusty ebon wings, Kaw took to the air once more.
Long admired by the lasses for its glossy ebon waves, now, at only eight and twenty, it was thinning rapidly.
They jeered when I spoke of the lunar mountains, And the thrilling heat and cold, And the ebon valleys by silver peaks, And Spica quadrillions of miles away, And the littleness of man.
As past the pebbly beach the boat did flee On sidelong wing, into a silent cove, Where ebon pines a shade under the starlight wove.
Benignest kinship bids respond, When wail the weak, and them restore Whom days as fell as this may rive, While Earth sits ebon in her gloom, Us atomies of life alive Unheeding, bent on life to come.
The hollow, brittle rinds of two adult Cabalists collapsed into a thousand fragments as the last of their essence was converted into ebon mist and absorbed by the First.
They twitched threateningly, extending ebon pseudopods to try and trip him as he fled from something monstrous that was darker than dark.
They jeered when I spoke of the lunar mountains, And the thrilling heat and cold, And the ebon valleys by silver peaks, And Spica quadrillions of miles away, And the littleness of man.