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Discover Ludwig"mint green" is correct and usable in written English.
It is typically used as an adjective to describe the color of something. For example, "The walls in my bedroom are painted a soft mint green."
Exact(43)
Entourages get mint green.
A mint green shoe from Vivienne Westwood.
Like mint green, frost blue and pale yellow.
The front room was initially painted mint green.
He brushed a horizontal stripe of mint green, and paused.
A pale mint green, in fact, according to Clare Balding.
Similar(17)
Mint green- 6 green and 2 yellow.
Mesmerized by the tattoos, Jewel motioned toward the mint-green pie cabinet behind her.
"Calm down," I told myself, furtively peering again under the mint-green paper cover.
The woman wearing a mint-green dress with tiny pink flowers is trying not to cry.
Part of the pleasure was dialing reception from the mint-green 1960s-inspired room phone.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com