-wash
English
Suffix
-wash
- To coat with, or a coating of, paint of the colour specified.
- 1848, Joshua Fawcett, Church rides in the neighbourhood of Scarborough, Yorkshire, page 22:
- At present, successive coats of yellowwash fill up the rich decoration of this doorway, so that its beauty is not brought out to the eye of the unpractised visitor.
- 1930, Francis Hamilton, Journal of Francis Buchanan Kept During the Survey of the District of Bhagalpur in 1810-1811:
- The natives dig clay from both places, in order to paint or rather redwash the walls of their huts.
- 2021, Roger H. Guichard, Middle East Tapestry, Wipf and Stock Publishers, →ISBN, page 266:
- The only touch of color was provided by a small copy Leonardo's Last Supper and three crudely painted windows, executed in a kind of bluewash and orangewash, over the altar.
- To focus on, or an act of focussing on, a supposedly positive aspect of an organisation in order to distract from or downplay negative perceptions.
- 2004, John M. Talbot, Grounds for Agreement: The Political Economy of the Coffee Commodity Chain, Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, →ISBN, page 210:
- They are likely to remain small and relatively marginalized niche markets, even as some of their rhetoric is appropriated by the TNCs for use as marketing gimmicks and bluewash.
- 2012, Guy Pearse, Greenwash: Big Brands and Carbon Scams, Black Inc., →ISBN:
- In embracing and promoting their collaborations with WWF, these companies are being encouraged to greenwash their brands with the WWF logo.
- 2014, Bruce Burgett, Glenn Hendler, Keywords for American Cultural Studies, Second Edition, NYU Press, →ISBN:
- One might argue that more is at stake than hiring multiracial, female, and lesbian/gay/bisexual/transgender (LGBT) employees to rainbowwash corporate agendas.
- 2018, Cyril Ghosh, De-Moralizing Gay Rights: Some Queer Remarks on LGBT+ Rights Politics in the US, Springer, →ISBN, page 20:
- Spade suggests here, in the same breath, both that the Obama administration uses its "declarations of gay rights" to pinkwash and that its support for gay rights is "used as a rationale for domestic and international regimes of racialized violence and warfare."
- (informal) An overwhelming victory by a team or entity of the colour specified; often a clean sweep.
- 2016 June 21, Andrew Webster, Roy Masters, Steve Mascord, Phil Lutton, Brad Walter, with Barrett, Chris, Pengilly, Adam, Proszenko, Adrian, and Chammas, Michael, “State of Origin 2016: Who the experts are tipping in game two”, in The Sydney Morning Herald:
- A Maroonwash will be two-thirds complete on a fast track at Suncorp.
Derived terms
English terms suffixed with -wash
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