millennial pink
English
editEtymology
editNamed for its popularity in fashion and design in the late 2010s among millennials.[1][2]
Pronunciation
editNoun
editmillennial pink (countable and uncountable, plural millennial pinks)
- A light rosy pink colour.
- 2017, Lisa De Pasquale, The Social Justice Warrior Handbook: A Practical Survival Guide for Snowflakes, Millennials, and Generation Z, page 23:
- Millennial pink is a streetwear staple.
- 2018, Rebecca Soffer, Gabrielle Birkner, Modern Loss: Candid Conversation About Grief, unnumbered page:
- […] when they talk about their jobs or their dating lives or how they're secretly kind of sick of millennial pink.
- 2019, Kaye Blegvad, The Pink Book: An Illustrated Celebration of the Color, from Bubblegum to Battleships, page 76:
- Millennial pink started to crop up around 2012, and by 2015 it was ubiquitous.
- millennial pink:
Adjective
editmillennial pink (not comparable)
- Of a light rosy pink colour.
- 2022 May 11, Sandra E. Garcia, “Butt Lifts Are Booming. Healing Is No Joke.”, in The New York Times Magazine[1]:
- But on Instagram she found a world of recovery houses — many of them decorated in a millennial pink, hyperfeminine aesthetic — where she would be healing alongside other women who had just gone through the same procedure and would be cared for by a team of women who would cook for her, […]
References
edit- ^ "‘Millennial pink’ is the colour of now – but what exactly is it?", The Guardian, 22 March 2017
- ^ Georgia Murray, "Why millennial pink was no accident," CNN, 24 September 2018