black

black — adjective

1. of the deepest dark shade, like charcoal or a moonless sky.

1.形容詞A1
釋義

of the deepest dark shade, like charcoal or a moonless sky.

例句

Nina wore a black coat and boots to the winter concert.

black + clothing noun for colour

The puppy has one white paw and one black ear.

同義詞
  • dark

    broader; something dark is not always fully black

  • jet-black

    stronger; stresses an especially deep black shade

  • ebony

    more literary or design-focused

反義詞
  • white

    the usual opposite colour

  • pale

    broader opposite for something light in colour

文法句型

black + noun

be/look/turn black

用法筆記

Use this sense for the colour of objects, clothes, hair, or marks. Distinguish from sense 2, which describes a place or time with no light.

常見錯誤

The room is black because the lamp is off.
The room is dark because the lamp is off.
💡For lack of light, English usually uses sense 2 rather than the colour sense.

2. with no light in it, so it is hard or impossible to see.

2.形容詞
釋義

with no light in it, so it is hard or impossible to see.

例句

The house went black when the storm cut the power.

go black = lose light or power

At midnight, the path was black beyond the last street lamp.

同義詞
  • dark

    the most common everyday word

  • pitch-black

    stronger; stresses complete darkness

  • unlit

    focuses on the lack of lamps or lighting

反義詞
  • bright

    full of light

  • lit

    made bright by lamps, candles, or other light

文法句型

be/go black

black room / sky / road

用法筆記

Usually used about rooms, roads, stages, skies, or screens when light disappears. Distinguish from sense 1, which is about actual colour.

3. used for people with dark skin, especially with African family roots, and for th

3.形容詞A2
釋義

used for people with dark skin, especially with African family roots, and for their culture or communities.

例句

Our library has a new shelf for books by Black writers.

Black + noun for people or culture

The school invited two Black musicians to lead the workshop.

同義詞

文法句型

Black + noun

Black people

Black culture / history / community

用法筆記

Often written with a capital B when it refers to people, identity, or culture. Distinguish from noun/3 in another chunk: this adjective use before a noun is the normal modern wording, as in 'Black writers'.

常見錯誤

The article interviewed five blacks from the neighborhood.
The article interviewed five Black residents from the neighborhood.
💡Modern English usually prefers 'Black' before a noun rather than using it alone as a noun.

4. served with no milk or cream mixed in.

4.形容詞
釋義

served with no milk or cream mixed in.

例句

Jules drinks his coffee black on early work mornings.

drink coffee black

Could I have two black coffees for table seven?

black coffee in a cafe order

同義詞
反義詞
  • white

    especially British for tea or coffee with milk

  • milky

    describes a drink with a noticeable amount of milk

文法句型

black coffee

black tea

drink / take + coffee or tea + black

用法筆記

Used mainly after coffee or tea, or after verbs such as 'drink' and 'take'. It does not mean the drink looks dark; it means no milk has been added.

常見錯誤

I drink my coffee in black.
I drink my coffee black.
💡After 'drink' or 'take', 'black' is the adjective describing the coffee.

5. made very dirty by dust, soot, oil, or earth.

5.形容詞
釋義

made very dirty by dust, soot, oil, or earth.

例句

By noon, the mechanic's hands were black with engine oil.

black with + dirty substance

After the camping trip, our socks came home black with mud.

同義詞
  • dirty

    broader and more general

  • grimy

    suggests sticky or ground-in dirt

  • sooty

    best when the dirt comes from smoke or coal

反義詞

文法句型

black with soot / mud / oil

black hands / nails / face

用法筆記

Often followed by 'with' plus the substance that caused the dirt, such as soot, mud, or oil. Distinguish from sense 1, where the black colour is natural or intended.

6. showing strong anger, hate, or bitter resentment.

6.形容詞
釋義

showing strong anger, hate, or bitter resentment.

例句

Mara gave her brother a black look across the dinner table.

black look = angry expression

After the vote, the manager left the room in a black mood.

in a black mood

同義詞
  • angry

    the usual everyday word

  • furious

    stronger and more intense

  • hostile

    stresses unfriendly feeling or attitude

反義詞

文法句型

black mood

black look / stare

go black with anger

用法筆記

Usually appears in literary or dramatic descriptions such as 'a black look' or 'black with anger'. Distinguish from adjective/7 in the other chunk, which is about hopeless situations rather than a person's anger.

7. showing that a situation is likely to end badly and giving people almost no reas

7.形容詞B2
釋義

showing that a situation is likely to end badly and giving people almost no reason to feel hopeful.

例句

By evening, the doctor's silence made the family's future look black.

black outlook = hopeless future

After three layoffs, the factory's future looked black to everyone in town.

look + black

同義詞
  • bleak

    close in meaning and common for futures or prospects

  • grim

    often stresses danger or suffering more strongly

  • hopeless

    more direct and less literary

反義詞
  • hopeful

    suggests there are still reasons for confidence

  • bright

    often used for a good future or positive outlook

文法句型

look/seem + black

black + future/outlook/prospects

用法筆記

Often used with nouns such as future, outlook, picture, and prospects, or after verbs like look and seem. Distinguish from sense 2 (DARK): this sense is about a hopeless outlook, not lack of light.

常見錯誤

The room was black after sunset.
The room was dark after sunset.
💡For no light, use sense 2; this sense describes a situation that feels hopeless.

8. morally very wrong, or connected with cruel and harmful intentions.

8.形容詞C1
釋義

morally very wrong, or connected with cruel and harmful intentions.

例句

The judge called the attack a black deed against an old man.

black deed = wicked act

In the story, the king hides a black heart behind his smile.

black heart

同義詞
  • wicked

    common and direct for morally bad behaviour

  • evil

    the broadest synonym for deep moral wrong

  • sinister

    often stresses threat or hidden danger rather than moral judgment alone

反義詞
  • good

    the broad everyday opposite

  • virtuous

    stronger and more formal; stresses moral goodness

文法句型

black + deed/heart/lie

black + abstract noun

用法筆記

Most often appears before nouns such as deed, lie, heart, soul, or thoughts, especially in dramatic or literary style. Distinguish from sense 6 (ANGRY): that sense shows resentment, while this one judges character as morally bad.

常見錯誤

He has a black mood, so he shouted at us.
He was in a black mood, so he shouted at us.
💡'Black' for evil usually goes before nouns like heart or deed; with mood, it belongs to the hopeless or angry senses instead.

9. using jokes to talk about death, crime, or other shocking subjects.

9.形容詞C1
釋義

using jokes to talk about death, crime, or other shocking subjects.

例句

The play uses black humour to talk about death in a small village.

black humour + terrible subject

Many readers laughed, although the novel's black jokes came from war.

black jokes

同義詞
  • dark

    common modern alternative, especially in 'dark comedy' or 'dark joke'

  • morbid

    stresses the disturbing subject matter more than the humour

  • satirical

    focuses more on criticism than on shocking subject matter

反義詞

文法句型

black humour/comedy/joke

black + noun for comic style

用法筆記

Usually comes before nouns such as humour, comedy, joke, or satire. The language sounds funny on the surface, but the topic is death, violence, illness, or another painful subject.

常見錯誤

The comedian is black because his jokes are about death.
The comedian uses black humour.
💡This sense usually describes the humour or comedy, not the person directly.

black — noun

black — verb