color

/ˈkʌlə(r)/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈkʌlər/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈkə-lər/ (ame, mw)

color — noun

1. The look of things that comes from how they take in or send back light; what mak

1.名詞A1
釋義

The look of things that comes from how they take in or send back light; what makes you see something as red, blue, yellow, or green instead of just black and white.

例句

Aiko chose a bright shade of orange for her bedroom walls.

collocation: bright shade of

The color of the leaves changes from green to gold every autumn.

collocation: color of + leaves

同義詞
  • hue

    more technical; describes a color's position on the spectrum

  • shade

    a particular variety of a color, usually darker

文法句型

color of something

2. The shade of a person's skin, often used to describe or think about racial or et

2.名詞A2
釋義

The shade of a person's skin, often used to describe or think about racial or ethnic background.

例句

Amara smiled at the mix of colors in her classroom on the first morning.

context: colors in a classroom — skin color

Rashida filled out the job application form and paused at the question about her color.

context: question about one's color on a form

同義詞
  • race

    broader concept that includes cultural and geographic heritage, not just skin shade

  • complexion

    focuses on the condition and natural tone of facial skin

文法句型

color of someone's skin

people of color

用法筆記

Often used in the phrase people of color to refer to people who are not white. Avoid using color alone to refer to a person's race in informal contexts — skin color or race are more neutral.

3. A reddish or pink look on a person's face that shows strong feelings such as emb

3.名詞B1
釋義

A reddish or pink look on a person's face that shows strong feelings such as embarrassment, shyness, or excitement, or that signals good health.

例句

A sudden color rose to Hana's cheeks when she realized everyone was looking at her.

color + rose to [someone's] cheeks

The brisk walk put color back into Tomás's pale face.

collocation: put color back into

同義詞
  • flush

    suggests a sudden rush of redness, often from strong emotion

  • blush

    specifically connected to embarrassment or shyness

  • rosiness

    a healthy, gentle pinkness

文法句型

color in/to someone's face/cheeks

color + verb (rise, drain, return)

用法筆記

Distinguish from sense 2 (SKIN COLOR): this sense describes a temporary change in the face, not a person's permanent skin shade. When color drain from or rises to someone's face, the subject is usually the person whose face changes.

4. A solid or liquid substance, such as paint, dye, or ink, that you put on or in s

4.名詞A2
釋義

A solid or liquid substance, such as paint, dye, or ink, that you put on or in something to change its shade.

例句

Greta added a few drops of blue food color to the icing and stirred well.

collocation: food color

The artist mixed her own colors from powders and oil in a small jar.

同義詞
  • dye

    a liquid coloring for cloth, hair, or other materials

  • paint

    a thicker coating for walls, wood, or canvas

  • pigment

    the natural coloring matter in things; more technical

文法句型

[type] + color

color + for [purpose]

5. Qualities or details that make something lively, interesting, or emotionally ric

5.名詞B2
釋義

Qualities or details that make something lively, interesting, or emotionally rich — as when a story has vivid descriptions or a place has a unique atmosphere.

例句

The local farmers' market adds color to an otherwise quiet neighborhood.

metaphorical: adds color to [place]

Beatriz's travel blog is full of color — she describes the food and locals so well.

collocation: full of color

同義詞
  • vividness

    more formal; describes how clearly something can be imagined

  • liveliness

    focuses on energy and activity rather than descriptive detail

  • vibrancy

    suggests energy and brightness

反義詞

文法句型

add/give/bring color to something

full of color

用法筆記

Uncountable in this sense — you cannot say a color to mean interesting detail. Common in journalism: color refers to vivid human-interest details. Often paired with add, give, bring, or lend.

常見錯誤

The story had many colors.
The story had a lot of color.
💡In this abstract sense, color is uncountable.

6. The particular set of shades that a group uses on its uniforms, badges, or flag

6.名詞B1
釋義

The particular set of shades that a group uses on its uniforms, badges, or flag to show membership or loyalty.

例句

The fans all wore their team's colors — blue and white — to the championship game.

collocation: team's colors

Green and gold are the school colors — students wear shirts in those shades.

collocation: school colors

文法句型

[possessive] + colors

in [someone's] colors

用法筆記

Almost always used in the plural form colors, even when referring to a single set. Distinguish from sense 1 (SHADE OR HUE): these are the specific colors that symbolize a group, not any color in general.

常見錯誤

The team's color is red and black.
The team's colors are red and black.
💡Always plural when referring to team symbols.

color — verb