Word of the Day, December 13: 'Variegated'

# Literature Desk
Representational image | Photo: Canva
Representational image | Photo: Canva

Word of the day: VARIEGATED
Pronunciation: 
var·ie·gat·ed UK/ˈveə.rɪ.ɡeɪ.tɪd/ US/ˈver.i.ə.ɡeɪ.t̬ɪd/

Meaning:

'Variegated' describes something that has different colours, patches, streaks, or patterns.

Origin and History:

The word variegated comes from the Latin “variegatus”, meaning “made of various sorts or colours”

In plants, variegation refers to the appearance of different colors or patterns on leaves or other plant parts, beyond the usual green.

Cultural significance and modern usage:

Variegation has been admired worldwide for centuries:

  • In Japan, variegated bonsai and hostas are prized for their elegance and rarity.
  • In India, variegated colour patterns appear in Bandhani, Ikat, and Kalamkari textiles.
  • Biology: One of the most common and specialised modern uses is in botany and biology. Botanists and general gardeners use the term to describe plants, leaves, or flowers that naturally or through mutation exhibit two or more colours, such as green, white, yellow, or pink patches. This is a major trend in modern horticulture, with certain rare variegated plants fetching high prices.
  • Ecology: By simulating damage or acting as camouflage, leaf variegation may have an ecological purpose in the natural world and deter herbivores.
  • Figurative Language: In abstract contexts, such as a "variegated collection" of opinions, a "variegated geometry of politics", or "variegated forms" of economic and social impacts, the term is used more formally to describe diversity or variety.

Interesting facts:

  • Variegation in plants can occur naturally or be created through selective breeding. Some rare variegated species, like Monstera albo, are extremely expensive and treated like living art.
  • In biology, variegation can also result from genetic mutation, viral infection, or nutritional differences.
  • Variegated gemstones, like fluorite or agate, are prized for their colour banding and zoning formed during the original crystallisation process, not typically from "inclusions" in the traditional gemological sense.

Also read word of the day

Examples from books and articles:

  • “But the crotons were lusher than ever and the variegated bougainvillaeas she hadn’t thought would take were heavy with pink blossoms.” - In the Time of the Butterflies by Julia Alvarez
  • “This is the only species among those I have united under the genus Licinia which has any shade of red mixed in the colouring, all the others being variegated only with white, yellow, and black.” - Zoological Illustrations, Volume 2 by William Swainson

Synonyms

  • Colored
  • Colorful
  • Varied
  • Rainbow
  • Various

Antonyms

  • Colorless
  • Achromatic
  • Solid
  • Faded
  • Gray

Read more word of the day here.