'Lac dye' definitions:
Definition of 'lac dye'
From: WordNet
noun
Scarlet dye like cochineal; extracted with alkali from stick lac
Definition of 'Lac dye'
From: GCIDE
- Lac \Lac\, n. [Per. lak; akin to Skr. l[=a]ksh[=a]: cf. F. lague, It. & NL. lacca. Cf. Lake a color, Lacquer, Litmus.] A resinous substance produced mainly on the banyan tree, but to some extent on other trees, by the Laccifer lacca (formerly Coccus lacca), a scale-shaped insect, the female of which fixes herself on the bark, and exudes from the margin of her body this resinous substance. [1913 Webster]
- Note: Stick-lac is the substance in its natural state, incrusting small twigs. When broken off, and the coloring matter partly removed, the granular residuum is called seed-lac. When melted, and reduced to a thin crust, it is called shell-lac or shellac. Lac is an important ingredient in sealing wax, dyes, varnishes, and lacquers. [1913 Webster]
- Ceylon lac, a resinous exudation of the tree {Croton lacciferum}, resembling lac.
- Lac dye, a scarlet dye obtained from stick-lac.
- Lac lake, the coloring matter of lac dye when precipitated from its solutions by alum.
- Mexican lac, an exudation of the tree Croton Draco. [1913 Webster]