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IELTS BNC: 24372 COCA: 697

color

1 color (US) noun
or British colour /ˈkʌlɚ/
plural colors
1 color (US)
noun
or British colour /ˈkʌlɚ/
plural colors
Learner's definition of COLOR
: a quality such as red, blue, green, yellow, etc., that you see when you look at something颜色;色彩
[count]
[noncount]
see pictures of colors starting on this page
: something used to give color to something : a pigment or dye颜料;染料
[count]
[noncount]
[noncount]
: the use or combination of colors用色;配色
used to describe a photograph, televison picture, etc., that includes colors and that is not black and white(照片、电视图像等的)彩色
often used before another noun常用于另一名词前
see also in living color at living
[noncount] : the color of a person's skin as a mark of race(作为人种标志的)肤色
◊ A person of color is a person who is not white.有色人种
[noncount] : a pink or red tone in a person's face especially because of good health, excitement, or embarrassment(脸色)粉红,红润;(激动、尴尬时)脸红
colors [plural] : something (such as a flag) that shows that someone or something belongs to a specific group(代表某个团体的)旗帜,彩旗
[noncount] : interest or excitement趣味;乐趣
see also local color, off-color

a horse of a different color

see 1horse

show your true colors

: to show what you are really like : to reveal your real nature or character显露本性;露出真面目

with flying colors

see 1flying
2 color (US) verb
or British colour /ˈkʌlɚ/
colors; colored; coloring
2 color (US)
verb
or British colour /ˈkʌlɚ/
colors; colored; coloring
Learner's definition of COLOR
[+ object] : to give color to (something) : to change the color of (something)着色;染色
: to draw with crayons, markers, colored pencils, etc. : to fill in a shape or picture using markers, crayons, colored pencils, etc.(用记号笔、蜡笔、彩色铅笔等)涂色,着色
[no object]
[+ object]
see also color in (below)
[+ object] : to change (someone's ideas, opinion, attitude, etc.) in some way(以某种方式)影响
often used as (be) colored常用作(be) colored
[no object] literary : to become red in the face especially because of embarrassment(尤指尴尬引起的)脸红
often + at

color in

[phrasal verb]
color in (something) or color (something) in
: to add color to (a shape or picture) by using markers, crayons, colored pencils etc.(用记号笔、蜡笔、彩色铅笔等)着色,上色
see also 2color 2 (above)
IELTS BNC: 24372 COCA: 697

color

1 of 2

noun

col·​or ˈkə-lər How to pronounce color (audio)
plural colors
often attributive
1
a
: a phenomenon of light (such as red, brown, pink, or gray) or visual perception that enables one to differentiate otherwise identical objects
b(1)
: the aspect of the appearance of objects and light sources that may be described in terms of hue, lightness, and saturation (see saturation sense 4) for objects and hue, brightness, and saturation for light sources
the changing color of the sky
also : a specific combination of hue, saturation, and lightness or brightness
comes in six colors
(2)
: a color other than and as contrasted with black, white, or gray
c
colors plural : clothing of a bright (see bright entry 1 sense 4) color : clothing that is neither dark nor light in color
Wash your colors separately from your darks and lights.
2
: something used to give color : pigment
3
a
: two or more hues employed in a medium of presentation
movies in color
b
: the use or combination of colors
4
: skin pigmentation other than and especially darker than what is considered characteristic of people typically defined as white (see white entry 1 sense 2a)
The charges … allege that the social network discriminates based on color Shawn Knight
often used with of
… the policy of treating youthful offenders as adults falls most heavily on those of color. Kristin Choo
see also man of color, person of color, woman of color
5
: complexion tint:
a
: the tint characteristic of good health
… sat looking at her with wistful eyes, trying to see signs of hope in the faint color on Beth's cheeks. Louisa May Alcott
b
: blush
6
a
: an identifying badge, pennant, or flag
usually used in plural
a ship sailing under Swedish colors
b
: colored clothing distinguishing one as a member of a particular group or representative of a particular person or thing
usually used in plural
a jockey wearing the colors of the stablewore his college colors to the game
7
a
: character, nature
usually used in plural
showed himself in his true colors
b
colors plural : position as to a question or course of action : stand
… the USSR changed neither its colors nor its stripes during all of this … Norman Mailer
8
a
: vividness or variety of effects of language
… that color and force of style which were later to make him outstanding among American editors … Arthur Krock
9
: vitality, interest
The play had a good deal of color to it.
10
: analysis of game action or strategy, statistics and background information on participants, and often anecdotes provided by a sportscaster to give variety and interest to the broadcast of a game or contest
a color commentator
11
a
: an outward often deceptive show : appearance
His story has the color of truth.
b
: a legal claim to or appearance of a right, authority, or office
c
: a pretense offered as justification : pretext
the color for his action
d
: an appearance of authenticity : plausibility
lending color to this notion
12
colors plural
a
: a naval or nautical salute to a flag being hoisted or lowered
13
: the quality of timbre in music
the color and richness of the cello
14
: a small particle of gold in a gold miner's pan after washing
15
: a hypothetical property of quarks that differentiates each type into three forms having a distinct role in binding quarks together

color

2 of 2

verb

colored; coloring; colors

transitive verb

1
a
: to give color to
b
: to change the color of (as by dyeing, staining, or painting)
She colors her hair.
2
: to change as if by dyeing or painting: such as
a
: influence
"The lives of most of us have been colored by politics … " Christine Weston
b
: misrepresent, distort
a highly colored version of the facts
c
: gloss, excuse
color a lie
3
: characterize, label
… call it progress; color it inevitable with shades of job security C. E. Price

intransitive verb

1
: to fill in a shape or picture outlined on a piece of paper using markers, crayons, colored pencils, etc.
His granddaughter Fernanda sat at his side, coloring with crayons. Charles Montgomery
2
: to take on color
specifically : blush
She colored at the mention of his name.
colorer noun

Example Sentences

Noun The color of blood is red. What color are your eyes? What color paint shall we use? Blue and green are my favorite colors. The pillows are all different colors. The room needs more color. In early summer the garden is full of color. She added color to her outfit with a bright scarf. His eyes were bluish-green in color. She's using a new lip color. Verb We colored the water with red ink. The children were busy coloring in their coloring books. My nephew colored a picture for me. The child colored the sky blue and the sun yellow. See More
Recent Examples on the Web
Noun
Its most notable feature are front seats that differ in color from the rear seats. Tribune News Service, cleveland, 10 Sep. 2022 The first photo is black-and-white while the following snaps are in color, showing that the confetti is blue. Angela Andaloro, Peoplemag, 9 Sep. 2022 Afterward, the grapes lay there for two weeks, caramelizing under the sun and turning golden-amber in color, before finally being pressed at the winery. Jess Lander, San Francisco Chronicle, 7 Sep. 2022 The new footage, taken during a 2022 OceanGate expedition to the Titanic, gives viewers a glimpse of the vessel in vivid color, revealing the ship’s bow, portside anchor, hull and massive anchor chain. Michelle Harris, Smithsonian Magazine, 6 Sep. 2022 For spring, skip blue denim and try out the trend in color with green, yellow or orange. Jamila Stewart, Essence, 1 Sep. 2022 The Yodygaga Ribbed Seamless Yoga set is the kind of item that your favorite TikToker probably owns in every color. Elizabeth Djinis, SELF, 31 Aug. 2022 The Emerald is perfect, intense in color, fascinating in its inclusions. Evan Nicole Brown, The Hollywood Reporter, 31 Aug. 2022 The clams typically have an outer shell that is yellow-green in color with white spots, and an inner shell that is purple. Emily Mae Czachor, CBS News, 29 Aug. 2022
Verb
Shepherd’s show will make its debut Sept. 12, and at least a few involved worry that the demise of Williams’ show could color her successor’s entrance. Lacey Rose, The Hollywood Reporter, 22 Aug. 2022 Gruman, who has two children, is eyeing it to create a dedicated place where her kids can color. Lindsey M. Roberts, Washington Post, 18 Aug. 2022 Kim said small businesses are the risk takers, rebels and people who color outside the lines and create change. Sean Mcdonnell, cleveland, 28 July 2022 The work that creatives do, both on screen and off, help color our understanding of our communities and the world at large. Angelique Jackson, Variety, 20 July 2022 The directorial directive seems to be: Go nuts… but, actually, please just color within the lines. A.a. Dowd, Rolling Stone, 9 May 2022 Working with Indeed, Floyd had access to production and post-production professionals, which afforded him the opportunity to color correct and craft sound design in a studio setting. Addie Morfoot, Variety, 16 June 2022 Given a certain number of colors at your disposal, there are many ways to color the graph. Quanta Magazine, 5 July 2022 Whether that legislation passes, and in what form, could largely color how advocates view progress on environmental initiatives in 2022, said Robin Clark, a Maryland staff attorney with the Chesapeake Bay Foundation. Scott Dance, Baltimore Sun, 28 Mar. 2022 See More

Word History

Etymology

Noun

Middle English colour, borrowed from Anglo-French, going back to Latin color, earlier colōs "color as a physical phenomenon, pigment, complexion, appearance," probably, assuming an original meaning "covering, outermost layer, appearance," going back to *ḱel-ōs, collective derivative from an Indo-European s-stem *ḱel-os "covering" (whence perhaps Sanskrit śaras- "skin on boiled milk, cream" and, from a thematic derivative, Old High German hulisa "hull of a legume"), derivative of a verbal base *ḱel- "cover, conceal" — more at conceal

Verb

Middle English colouren, borrowed from Anglo-French colurer, going back to Latin colōrāre, derivative of color color entry 1

First Known Use

Noun

14th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1a

Verb

14th century, in the meaning defined at transitive sense 1a

Time Traveler
The first known use of color was in the 14th century
IELTS BNC: 24372 COCA: 697

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