mul‧ti‧col‧oured British English,
multicolored American English /ˈmʌltiˌkʌləd $ -ərd/
adjective [
Word Family: noun:
COLOUR/COLOR,
COLOURING/COLORING,
coloration,
COLOURANT/COLORANT,
COLOURIST/COLORIST;
adjective:
COLOURED/COLORED, discoloured/discolored,
COLOURFUL/COLORFUL ≠
COLOURLESS/COLORLESS,
multicoloured,
COLOUR/COLOR;
verb:
COLOUR/COLOR;
adverb:
COLOURFULLY/COLORFULLY ≠
COLOURLESSLY/COLORLESSLY]
having many different colours:
a multicoloured sweatshirt [TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English ▲
colour red, blue, yellow etc:
Blue is my favourite colour. Matisse was famous for his use of colour.shade a particular type of a colour:
The dress is a light shade of pink. He uses different shades of green.hue /hjuː/
literary or technical a particular colour or shade of a colour:
Her face had lost its golden hue.tint a small amount of a colour in something that is mostly another colour:
He wears sunglasses that have a pinky-orange tint.tone one of the many different shades of a colour, each slightly darker, lighter, brighter etc than the next:
Carpets in neutral tones give a feeling of space.dark used about a colour that is strong and fairly close to black:
a dark blue suit His eyes are dark brown.deep fairly dark – often used when you think this colour looks attractive:
His eyes were a beautiful deep blue. deep red lipsrich used about a colour that is fairly dark in a way that gives a pleasant feeling of warmth:
The walls were painted a rich red colour.light used about a colour that is not dark:
a light blue sweater His T-shirt was light green.pale used about a colour that is very light:
He has very pale blue eyes.soft used about a colour that is light in a way that is attractive because it is not too obvious:
She wears soft colours such as cream, which match her complexion.pastel used about a colour that has a lot of white in it:
The girls wore pastel pink sundresses.bright used about a colour that is strong and easy to see:
The front door was painted bright red.brilliant/vivid used about a colour that is very bright:
I looked out at the brilliant blue sky. vivid red flowerscolourful British English,
colorful American English used about things that have many different bright colours:
There were window boxes full of colourful flowers.multicoloured British English,
multicolored American English used about things that have a pattern of many different bright colours:
A multicoloured flag waved in the midday sun.gaudy/garish too brightly coloured, in a way that is unattractive:
The wallpaper was much too gaudy for me. a garish orange tie [TahlilGaran] English Thesaurus ▲