Orange
Pronunciation
- UK IPA: /ˈɒ.ɹɪndʒ/
- US enPR: är'ənj, IPA: /ˈɔɹ.əndʒ/, /ˈɑɹ.əndʒ/, /ˈɔɹndʒ/
- CA IPA: /ˈɔɹndʒ/
- Homophones: Orange
- Rhymes: -ɒɹɪndʒ
Origin
Middle English orenge, orange, from Old French pome orenge 'Persian orange', literally 'orange apple', influenced by Old Provencal auranja and calqued from Old Italian melarancio, melarancia, compound of mela 'apple' and (n)arancia 'orange', from Arabic نارنج, from Persian نارنگ, from Sanskrit नारङà¥à¤— (nÄraá¹…ga, "orange tree"), from Dravidian (compare Tamil nartankÄy, compound of நரநà¯à®¤à®®à¯ (narantam, "fragrance") and காய௠(kÄy, "fruit"); also Telugu నారంగమà±, Malayalam നാരങàµà´™, Kannada ನಾರಂಗಿ).
For the color sense, replaced Old English geoluread ("yellow-red"); compare Modern English blue-green.
Usage notes
It is commonly believed that “orange†has no rhymes. While there are no commonly used English dictionary words that rhyme exactly with “orange†(“door-hinge†comes close in US pronunciation), the English surname Gorringe is a rhyme, at least in UK pronunciation. See Orange_(word)#Rhyme
Full definition of orange
Noun
orange
(countable and uncountable; plural oranges)- An evergreen tree of the genus Citrus such as Citrus sinensis.
- The fruit of an orange tree; a citrus fruit with a slightly sour flavour.
- The colour of a ripe fruit of an orange tree, midway between red and yellow.
- Orange juice, or orange coloured and flavoured cordial.
Derived terms
Antonyms
- (having orange as its colour) nonorange
Verb
- (transitive) To color orange.
- 1986, Gilles Deleuze, Cinema: The movement-image, It is this composition which reaches a colourist perfection in Le Bonheur with the complementarity of violet, purple and oranged gold
- 1987, Harold Keith, Rifles for Watie, Jeff winked his eyes sleepily open and looked out into the cool flush of early morning. The east was oranged over with daybreak.
- 2009, Suzanne Crowley, The Very Ordered Existence of Merilee Marvelous, I looked at him through my binoculars, his little lips oranged with Cheeto dust.
- (intransitive) To become orange.
- 2007, Terézia Mora, Day in day out, Cranes in the distance against the background of the slowly oranging sky
- 2008, Wanda Coleman, It will be followed by a disappearance of the cash I had hidden in a sealed envelope behind the oranging Modigliani print over the living room couch.
- 2010, Justin Cronin, The Passage, "What about his eyes?"
"Nothing. No oranging at all, from what I could see.