[1][2] There are other similar chemical formulations of products sold as fuchsine, and several dozen other synonyms of this molecule.
In the literature of biological stains the name of this dye is frequently misspelled, with omission of the terminal -e, which indicates an amine.
[7][8] François-Emmanuel Verguin [fr] discovered the substance independently of Hofmann the same year and patented it.
They leave dark greenish streaks on paper and when these are moistened with a solvent, the strong magenta colour appears.
If one of these is protonated to form ABCNH+, the positive charge is delocalized across the whole symmetrical molecule due to pi cloud electron movement.
The positive charge can be thought of as residing on the central carbon atom and all three "wings" becoming identical aromatic rings terminated by a primary amine group.
The ability of fuchsine to be protonated by a stronger acid gives it its basic property.