carnation

[kahr-ney-shuh n] /kɑrˈneɪ ʃən/
noun
1.
any of numerous cultivated varieties of the clove pink, Dianthus caryophyllus, having long-stalked, fragrant, usually double flowers in a variety of colors: the state flower of Ohio.
2.
pink; light red.
3.
Obsolete. the color of flesh.
adjective
4.
having the color carnation.
Origin
1525-35; < Late Latin carnātiōn- (stem of carnātiō) fleshlikeness, hence flesh-color, equivalent to Latin carn- (stem of carō) flesh + -ātiōn- -ation
Examples from the web for carnation
  • Keep carnation stems in water while you work, removing several at a time to add to the wreath.
  • She had a big funeral and she was laid out in her wedding dress in a white casket surrounded by every carnation in four counties.
  • carnation, the pink is called, after the flower with no pretensions.
  • carnation is expected to consume the old bakery, to convert into much-needed indoor seating.
  • She used a heavy carnation-scented perfume that turned my stomach.
British Dictionary definitions for carnation

carnation

/kɑːˈneɪʃən/
noun
1.
Also called clove pink. a Eurasian caryophyllaceous plant, Dianthus caryophyllus, cultivated in many varieties for its white, pink, or red flowers, which have a fragrant scent of cloves
2.
the flower of this plant
3.
  1. a pink or reddish-pink colour
  2. (as adjective): a carnation dress
4.
(often pl) a flesh tint in painting
Word Origin
C16: from French: flesh colour, from Late Latin carnātiō fleshiness, from Latin carō flesh
Word Origin and History for carnation
n.

"Dianthus Caryophyllus," commonly also called "pink," herbaceous perennial flowering plant native to southern Europe and abundant in Normandy, 1530s, of uncertain origin. The early forms are confused; perhaps (on evidence of early spellings) it is a corruption of coronation, from the flower's being used in chaplets or from the toothed crown-like look of the petals.

Or it might be called for its pinkness and derive from Middle French carnation "person's color or complexion" (15c.), which probably is from Italian dialectal carnagione "flesh color," from Late Latin carnationem (nominative carnatio) "fleshiness," from Latin caro "flesh" (see carnage). This carnation had been borrowed separately into English as "color of human flesh" (1530s) and as an adjective meaning "flesh-colored" (1560s; the earliest use of the word in English was to mean "the incarnation of Christ," mid-14c.). OED points out that not all the flowers are this color.