colour

colour — verb

1. when the shade or appearance of something turns into a different colour, or when

1.動詞及物 / 不及物A1
釋義

when the shade or appearance of something turns into a different colour, or when you cause that change by adding something like paint or dye

例句

The leaves on the maple tree began to colour gold in early October.

colour + gold/red/blue — verb followed by colour name

Sumin coloured the paper heart bright red for her mother's birthday card.

colour + object + colour name

同義詞
  • dye

    specifically means adding colour by soaking in a liquid dye, not by painting or drawing

  • tint

    usually means adding a small amount of colour to something, often a liquid or a light source

  • stain

    implies colour that soaks into the material rather than sitting on the surface

反義詞
  • fade

    to lose colour over time

文法句型

colour + [colour name]

colour + object + [colour name]

用法筆記

Unlike 'paint', which usually implies a deliberate coating, 'colour' can describe both natural processes (leaves colouring) and intentional actions (colouring a picture).

常見錯誤

She coloured the wall blue with a brush.
She painted the wall blue with a brush.
💡'paint' is more natural for walls and large surfaces; 'colour' is less common for professional painting.

2. to fill a picture or outline with different shades using crayons, felt-tip pens,

2.動詞及物 / 不及物A2
釋義

to fill a picture or outline with different shades using crayons, felt-tip pens, paints, or similar art materials

例句

The kindergarten children spent the afternoon colouring pictures of farm animals.

colour + picture/drawing — typical object

Mayumi carefully coloured the flowers in her notebook with purple and yellow pencils.

colour + with + [tool]

同義詞
  • colour in

    phrasal verb version, very common in British English ('colour in the picture')

  • shade

    means filling an area with pencil marks, not necessarily with multiple colours

文法句型

colour + [picture/drawing]

colour + object + with + [tool]

用法筆記

This sense is the one used for the activity 'colouring in' — a common childhood pastime. The object is nearly always a picture, outline, or area within a drawing.

常見錯誤

I coloured my hair with a purple pencil.
I coloured the cat in my colouring book with a purple pencil.
💡'colour' for hair dye is unnatural; use 'dye' instead.

3. when a person's face becomes red, usually because they feel embarrassed, shy, or

3.動詞不及物B2
釋義

when a person's face becomes red, usually because they feel embarrassed, shy, or ashamed

例句

Ayesha coloured when the teacher praised her project in front of the whole class.

colour when [something embarrassing happens]

Gabriel coloured with embarrassment after accidentally tripping on the stage.

colour with + emotion (embarrassment/ shame)

同義詞
  • blush

    the more common everyday word; 'colour' is slightly more formal or literary

  • go red

    informal phrasal expression, very common in speech ('he went red')

  • flush

    can also mean face turning red, but often from strong emotion or physical causes like fever

反義詞
  • pale

    to become pale, especially from fear or shock — opposite of turning red from embarrassment

文法句型

colour + with + [emotion]

用法筆記

Used mainly in formal or literary contexts. In everyday speech, 'blush' or 'go red' are more common.

常見錯誤

She coloured her face red.
She coloured (went red) when she realised her mistake.
💡this sense is intransitive; you cannot colour your face or colour something red when describing blushing.

4. to cause a person's opinion, attitude, or judgement to become less positive or f

4.動詞及物C2
釋義

to cause a person's opinion, attitude, or judgement to become less positive or fair, usually because of a past experience or personal bias

例句

Yusuf's previous experience with dishonest mechanics coloured his view of every auto repair shop.

colour + one's view/opinion of something

The newspaper article was heavily coloured by the writer's own political opinions.

passive: be coloured by [something]

同義詞
  • bias

    more direct and common; implies unfair prejudice rather than a general influence

  • distort

    stronger word that implies the opinion becomes incorrect or inaccurate

  • tarnish

    suggests something once good is now spoiled, especially a reputation or image

反義詞
  • clarify

    to make an opinion clearer or fairer, opposite of introducing bias

文法句型

be coloured by + [experience/event]

colour + [opinion/view]

用法筆記

Common in passive constructions ('coloured by'). Has a negative connotation — the influence usually distorts or biases rather than improves the judgement.

常見錯誤

Her kindness coloured my day.
Her kindness brightened my day.
💡'colour' in this figurative sense has a negative meaning, so it should not be used for a positive effect.

colour — noun

colour — adjective