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âOrangeâ as a name is a result of a long chain. Anyway, the name of the color is taken from the fruit. In Spanish, the fruit is ânaranjaâ and the color is âcolor de naranjaâ â and the name ânaranjaâ comes from the old Arabic name of the fruit (Naaranj), and the old Arabic name comes originally from Persian, and I think the Persian names from an old Turkic or Chinese origin; With modifications of course.
I think itâs a very good question from ignorance. Tina should not be mocked for wondering, but commended. For example, Swedish borrowed âorangeâ as a color from english, the previous âbrandgulâ (fire yellow) is rarely used nowadays. The fruit itself is âapelsinâ (apple china) so no connection there, itâs just a color.
In English, the colour is named after the fruit. Prior to the addition of that word to the language, any item that was more or less orange would have been described as gold.
seanfear almost 3 years ago
âOrangeâ as a name is a result of a long chain. Anyway, the name of the color is taken from the fruit. In Spanish, the fruit is ânaranjaâ and the color is âcolor de naranjaâ â and the name ânaranjaâ comes from the old Arabic name of the fruit (Naaranj), and the old Arabic name comes originally from Persian, and I think the Persian names from an old Turkic or Chinese origin; With modifications of course.
Holilubillkori Premium Member almost 3 years ago
Oranges aka Delicious! (ÂŽâïœ)
bunwarpgazoo Premium Member almost 3 years ago
I think itâs a very good question from ignorance. Tina should not be mocked for wondering, but commended. For example, Swedish borrowed âorangeâ as a color from english, the previous âbrandgulâ (fire yellow) is rarely used nowadays. The fruit itself is âapelsinâ (apple china) so no connection there, itâs just a color.
Jeffin Premium Member almost 3 years ago
Orange you glad she didnât start talking about bananas?
LOLBeth almost 3 years ago
In English, the colour is named after the fruit. Prior to the addition of that word to the language, any item that was more or less orange would have been described as gold.
Steverino Premium Member almost 3 years ago
If an orange is caÄșled an orange because itâs orange, why isnât a lemon called a âyellowâ?
cuzinron47 almost 3 years ago
Now who hasnât wondered that. So no one wants to admit it huh?
Ray Helvy Premium Member almost 3 years ago
The color got its name from the fruit. Before then, the color would be called yellow-red or red-yellow, depending on the hue.
christelisbetty almost 3 years ago
Do they have the 4th of July in Europe? (I better add /S).