Blush
King James Dictionary [1]
1. To redden in the cheeks or face to be suddenly suffused with a red color in the cheeks or face, from a sense of guilt, shame, confusion, modesty, diffidence or surprise followed by at or for, before the cause of blushing as, blush at your vices blush for your degraded country.
In the presence of the shameless and unblushing, the young offender is ashamed to blush.
2. To bear a blooming red color, or any soft bright color as the blushing rose.
He bears his blushing honors thick upon him.
Shakespeare has used this word in a transitive sense, to make red, and it may be allowable in poetry.
Blush, n. A red color suffusing the cheeks only, or the face generally, and excited by confusion, which may spring from shame, guilt, modesty, diffidence or surprise.
The rosy blush of love.
1. A red or reddish color. 2. Sudden appearance a glance a sense taken from the sudden suffusion of the face in blushing as, a proposition appears absurd at first blush.
Webster's Dictionary [2]
(1): (v. i.) To grow red; to have a red or rosy color.
(2): (v. i.) To have a warm and delicate color, as some roses and other flowers.
(3): (v. t.) To express or make known by blushing.
(4): (n.) A suffusion of the cheeks or face with red, as from a sense of shame, confusion, or modesty.
(5): (n.) A red or reddish color; a rosy tint.
(6): (v. t.) To suffuse with a blush; to redden; to make roseate.
(7): (v. i.) To become suffused with red in the cheeks, as from a sense of shame, modesty, or confusion; to become red from such cause, as the cheeks or face.