[
US
/kɑɹˈneɪʃən/
]
[ UK /kɑːnˈeɪʃən/ ]
[ UK /kɑːnˈeɪʃən/ ]
NOUN
- Eurasian plant with pink to purple-red spice-scented usually double flowers; widely cultivated in many varieties and many colors
- a pink or reddish-pink color
ADJECTIVE
- pink or pinkish
How To Use carnation In A Sentence
- In her current incarnation she is a demigoddess, the daughter of Zeus and Queen Hippolyta.
- The judge was making the point that the Pledge, in its current incarnation, is only about 50 – 60 years old and that the language “under God” was inserted at a particular time in response to concerns of that time and that the Pledge is not some sacrosanct invocation from the founders. The Volokh Conspiracy » Judge Reinhardt’s Dig on Sarah Palin
- Most Hindu communities have a fundamental belief in reincarnation.
- On another song, she was accompanied by a montage of dozens of her previous incarnations.
- At length one noticed the fact, and another; and then it became the general topic of conversation in the group upon the bridge, where Ethelberta, her hair getting frizzed and her cheeks carnationed by the wind, sat upon a camp-stool looking towards the prow. The Hand of Ethelberta
- Topics include his exegesis, Mary and the incarnation, divinization and eschatology; but the Trinity and the Holy Spirit are the constant background.
- ng Meeting 7 is available online at www.randi.org Bio: Fintan Steele, director of scientific education and communications at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, traces the history of personalized medicine from Hippocrates and humorism to ‘overhyped’ modern day incarnations. 2010 April 09 | TECHNOLOGY NEWS
- Past incarnations have included journaling teaching, and an attempt at journaling straight lit and cultural crit.
- The bouquet contains naranja roses, tiger lilies, carnations, alstromeria, solidago, berries and a selection of greenery and twigs.
- They also wore button-down shirts and were sometimes with carnations in the lapels of their jackets.