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Traductor webConjugador de verbosBuscador de artículos en alemánUsage examplesWordsDefinitionIdioms
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Definition of "pale" in inglés

adjective

  1. Light in color.

    • I have pale yellow wallpaper.
    • She had pale skin because she didn't get much sunlight.
    • She turned pale and screamed on seeing the spider in the toilet.
  2. (of human skin) Having a pallor (a light color, especially due to sickness, shock, fright etc.).

    • His face turned pale after hearing about his mother's death.
  3. Feeble, faint.

    • He is but a pale shadow of his former self.
    • The son's clumsy paintings are a pale imitation of his father's.

verb

  1. (intransitive) To turn pale; to lose colour.

  2. (intransitive) To become insignificant.

    • 12 July 2012, Sam Adams, AV Club Ice Age: Continental Drift The matter of whether the world needs a fourth Ice Age movie pales beside the question of why there were three before it, but Continental Drift feels less like an extension of a theatrical franchise than an episode of a middling TV cartoon, lolling around on territory that’s already been settled.
  3. (transitive) To make pale; to diminish the brightness of.

noun

  1. (obsolete) Paleness; pallor.

noun

  1. A wooden stake; a picket.

    • 1707, John Mortimer, The Whole Art of Husbandry, London: H. Mortlock & J. Robinson, 2nd edition, 1708, Chapter 1, pp. 11-12, […] if you deſign it a Fence to keep in Deer, at every eight or ten Foot diſtance, ſet a Poſt with a Mortice in it to ſtand a little ſloping over the ſide of the Bank about two Foot high; and into the Mortices put a Rail […] and no Deer will go over it, nor can they creep through it, as they do often, when a Pale tumbles down.
  2. (archaic) A fence made from wooden stake; palisade.

  3. (by extension) Limits, bounds (especially before of).

    • But let my due feet never fail, / To walk the ſtudious cloyſters pale, / And love the high embowed roof, / With antic pillars maſſy proof, / And ſtoried windows richly dight, / Caſting a dim religious light.
  4. (heraldry) A vertical band down the middle of a shield.

  5. (archaic) A territory or defensive area within a specific boundary or under a given jurisdiction.

  6. (archaic) The jurisdiction (territorial or otherwise) of an authority.

  7. A cheese scoop.

verb

  1. To enclose with pales, or as if with pales; to encircle or encompass; to fence off.