white

white — adjective

1. having the lightest colour there is — the colour of fresh snow or clean paper, n

1.形容詞A1
釋義

having the lightest colour there is — the colour of fresh snow or clean paper, not dark at all

例句

Jenna wore a simple white dress to her graduation ceremony.

white + noun for describing objects

The walls in the kitchen were painted a bright white.

predicative: be + white

同義詞
  • snowy

    emphasises a pure, fresh white like snow — more poetic

  • ivory

    a slightly off-white shade with a warm tint

  • cream

    a pale yellow-white, less bright than pure white

反義詞
  • black

    the darkest colour, opposite of white on the lightness scale

文法句型

white + noun

be + white

用法筆記

This is the core colour sense of white; other senses (pale, blank, racial) are extensions of this basic meaning. In attributive position, white directly modifies the noun: white shirt, white paint.

常見錯誤

The shirt is colour white.
The shirt is white.
💡Do not add 'colour' after 'be' when describing colour.
It is a white colour shirt.
It is a white shirt.
💡Use the adjective directly before the noun without 'colour.'

2. describing a colour that is nearly white, being much lighter than the normal sha

2.形容詞A2
釋義

describing a colour that is nearly white, being much lighter than the normal shade you would expect; or saying that someone's face has become very pale because they are frightened, sick, or shocked

例句

Imani's face went white when she heard the terrible news.

go + white for sudden paleness

The walls were a soft white shade that made the room feel bigger.

white + shade for colour tones

同義詞
  • pale

    the most common synonym; can be used for faces or colours

  • ashen

    greyish-white, usually from shock or illness

  • colourless

    lacking any colour at all

反義詞
  • dark

    deep in colour, not pale

  • flushed

    red from emotion or exercise

文法句型

be/go/turn + white

white + noun (shade)

用法筆記

When describing a person's face, white usually refers to a temporary paleness caused by emotion or health, not skin colour. 'Go white' and 'turn white' are common collocations for sudden changes.

常見錯誤

He was white because of the cold.' (ambiguous — could mean skin colour)
His face went white from the cold.
💡Use 'face' or a body part to make clear you mean temporary paleness.

3. describing people whose skin is pale in colour, especially those whose family or

3.形容詞B1
釋義

describing people whose skin is pale in colour, especially those whose family originally came from Europe, or things that are associated with such people

例句

The town's population was mostly white before the factory opened.

white as a demographic adjective

The school curriculum included stories from white authors and writers of colour alike.

同義詞
  • Caucasian

    a more formal, technical term — less common in everyday speech

  • European

    geographically specific; not all white people are from Europe

文法句型

white + noun (people/community/society)

用法筆記

This sense is widely used in social and demographic discussion but can be sensitive. In some contexts, it is considered too broad or outdated as a racial label. The attributive position is most common: white neighbourhood, white culture, white student. Avoid using it as a stand-alone noun to refer to a person — use 'white person' or 'white people' instead.

常見錯誤

He is a white.
He is a white person.
💡'White' is an adjective, not a countable noun for individuals.

4. used before the name of a hot drink to show that it has milk or cream added to i

4.形容詞A2
釋義

used before the name of a hot drink to show that it has milk or cream added to it — for example, white coffee, white tea, or white hot chocolate

例句

Rohan always orders a large white coffee with one sugar in the morning.

white coffee — coffee with milk

Would you like white tea or green tea with your lunch?

同義詞
  • with milk

    descriptive phrase used in American English instead of 'white'

反義詞
  • black

    for coffee or tea without milk

文法句型

white + drink noun

用法筆記

Primarily British usage. In American English, people say 'coffee with milk' or 'coffee with cream' rather than 'white coffee.' 'White tea' refers to a lightly processed tea, not necessarily tea with milk.

常見錯誤

I'll have a white wine' (when meaning coffee).
I'll have a white coffee.
💡'White wine' is a different sense (alcoholic drink).

5. describing a surface, like a piece of paper, a board, or a wall, that is complet

5.形容詞B1
釋義

describing a surface, like a piece of paper, a board, or a wall, that is completely empty — there are no words, drawings, or marks of any kind on it

例句

Theo stared at the white page, unable to start his essay.

white page — empty writing surface

The teacher wrote the maths problem on the white board at the front of the class.

同義詞
  • blank

    the more common synonym for empty surfaces

  • empty

    general term for anything with nothing inside or on it

  • clean

    suggests the surface is fresh and unused

反義詞
  • written

    covered with writing or marks

  • filled

    with content on every part

文法句型

white + noun (paper/surface)

be + white

用法筆記

This sense overlaps with 'blank' but is less common. 'Blank' (white/5 can be used interchangeably with 'blank paper' but is more literal — it refers to the visual appearance of emptiness.

6. relating to white people as a racial or ethnic group, especially in political or

6.形容詞B2
釋義

relating to white people as a racial or ethnic group, especially in political or social contexts

例句

The candidate focused on winning the white vote in the southern states.

white vote — political demographic

Some historians argue that white backlash shaped American politics in the 1960s.

同義詞
  • conservative

    broader political label; not tied to race

  • reactionary

    strongly opposed to social or political change — more extreme

反義詞
  • progressive

    favouring social reform and change

  • liberal

    supporting individual rights and social equality

文法句型

white + noun (party/voter/policy)

用法筆記

In political contexts, white is often used in compound terms (white vote, white working class, white nationalism). These terms are not neutral descriptions — they carry strong ideological weight. The simple 'white party' is rarely used.

7. describing something or someone that is morally pure, uncorrupted by evil or wro

7.形容詞C1
釋義

describing something or someone that is morally pure, uncorrupted by evil or wrongdoing — used in religious, poetic, or symbolic language

例句

The bride wore white as a symbol of her pure intentions.

white for symbolic purity

In many cultures, white represents goodness, light, and truth.

同義詞
  • pure

    the most common synonym; less symbolic, more direct

  • innocent

    focuses on lack of guilt rather than colour symbolism

  • unstained

    figurative — not tainted by wrongdoing

反義詞
  • black

    symbolically associated with evil or darkness

  • stained

    figuratively corrupted by wrongdoing

文法句型

white + noun (soul/knight/dress)

be + white

用法筆記

This sense is almost always figurative or symbolic. It appears in fixed phrases like 'white magic' (used for good), 'white knight' (someone who rescues others), and 'white lie' (a harmless falsehood). Outside of these expressions, the sense can sound old-fashioned or overly poetic in everyday speech.

white — noun

white — verb