From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishmagentama‧gen‧ta /məˈdʒentə/ noun [uncountable] CCa dark reddish purple colour —magenta adjective
Examples from the Corpus
magenta• So yellow and cyan produces green, and yellow and magenta produces red.• Primary colours cyan, magenta and yellow.• One contains black ink; the other contains cyan, magenta and yellow.• The three parts carry either cyan, magenta and yellow ink or red, green and blue ink.• The white woman picked a branch of magenta bougainvillea flowers and put them in a glass on the table.• A shiver of magenta vibrates a yellow aureole of wall, dark teal scribbles a cloud of gray-blue floor.• He found hubcaps.-He repainted the car a pretty magenta.• Although it is summer, she is wearing magenta stockings and black shoes with delicate straps.Origin magenta (1800-1900) Magenta, town in Italy where the substance the color is made from was discovered