Definify.com

Webster 1913 Edition


orange

or′ange

,
Adj.
Of or pertaining to an orange; of the color of an orange; reddish yellow;
as, an
orange ribbon
.

Webster 1828 Edition


Orange

OR'ANGE

,
Noun.
[L. aurantium; so named from aurum, gold, which the orange resembles in color.]
The fruit of a species of Citrus which grows in warm climates. The fruit is round and depressed; it has a rough rind, which when ripe is yellow. This contains a vesicular pulp inclosed in nine cells for seeds. The tree producing oranges grows to the height of ten or twelve feet and bears the same name.

Definition 2024


Orange

Orange

See also: orange and orangé

English

Proper noun

Orange

  1. The longest river in South Africa
  2. A city in California
  3. A town in Connecticut
  4. A town in France.
  5. An unincorporated town in Indiana
  6. A town in Massachusetts
  7. A town in New Hampshire
  8. A township in New Jersey
  9. A city in New South Wales
  10. A town in New York
  11. A village in northeastern Ohio
  12. A city in Texas
  13. A town in Vermont
  14. A town in Virginia
  15. A town in Wisconsin
  16. The name of the Dutch Royal House.
  17. Prince or Princess of Orange. Title of the first-born to the Dutch Royal House.

Derived terms

Adjective

Orange (not comparable)

  1. Relating to the Orange Order.

Anagrams


French

Etymology

From from Old French Orenge, from Medieval Latin Aurasica, from Latin Aurasiō, from Gaulish *arausi 'temple (head), cheek' (compare Old Irish ara, arae 'temples', Irish placename Arai Chiach). Compare also the Occitan name of the town, Aurenja.

Noun

Orange

  1. Orange (town in the Vaucluse department in southern France)

See also


German

Etymology

From French pomme d'orange (short: orange), from Spanish naranja, from Arabic نَارَنْج (nāranj), from Persian نارنگ (nārang). Cognate with German Pomeranze.[1]

Pronunciation 1

  • IPA(key): /oˈʁãːʒə/, /oˈʁaŋʒə/, /oˈʁɔ̃ːʒə/, /oˈʁɔŋʒə/ (standard)
  • IPA(key): /oˈʁãːʃə/, /oˈʁaŋʃə/, /oˈʁɔ̃ːʃə/, /oˈʁɔŋʃə/ (some speakers in southern Germany and Austria)

Noun

Orange f (genitive Orange, plural Orangen)

  1. orange (fruit)
Declension
Synonyms

Pronunciation 2

  • IPA(key): /oˈʁãːʃ/, /oˈʁaŋʃ/, /oˈʁɔ̃ːʃ/, /oˈʁɔŋʃ/

Noun

Orange n (genitive Orange, no plural)

  1. orange (color)

See also

Colors in German · Farben (layout · text)
     Rot      Grün      Gelb      Creme      Weiß
     Purpur      Magenta      ?      ?      Rosa
     Indigo      Blau      Orange      Grau      Violett
     Schwarz      Purpur      Braun      Azurblau      Cyan

References

  1. Friedrich Kluge, “Etymologisches Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache” , 22. Auflage, 1989, bearbeitet von Elmar Seebold, ISBN 3-11-006800-1

Italian

Etymology

From French Orange, from Old French Orenge, from Medieval Latin Aurasica, from Latin Aurasiō, from Gaulish.

Proper noun

Orange m

  1. Orange (town in France)
  2. Orange (river in South Africa)

Luxembourgish

Noun

Orange f (plural Orangen)

  1. orange (fruit)

orange

orange

See also: Orange and orangé

English

Various shades of orange.
Some oranges (the fruits).
An orange tree.

Noun

orange (countable and uncountable, plural oranges)

  1. An evergreen tree of the genus Citrus such as Citrus sinensis.
  2. The fruit of an orange tree; a citrus fruit with a slightly sour flavour.
  3. The colour of a ripe fruit of an orange tree, midway between red and yellow.
    orange colour:    
  4. Orange juice, or orange coloured and flavoured cordial.

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 the Wikipedia article about rhymes for the word “orange”

Derived terms

Translations

Adjective

orange (comparative oranger or more orange, superlative orangest or most orange)

  1. Having the colour of the fruit of an orange tree; yellowred; reddish-yellow.

Antonyms

Translations

Verb

orange (third-person singular simple present oranges, present participle oranging, simple past and past participle oranged)

  1. (transitive) To color orange.
    • 1986, Gilles Deleuze, Cinema: The movement-image, page 118:
      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, page 256:
      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, page 117:
      I looked at him through my binoculars, his little lips oranged with Cheeto dust.
  2. (intransitive) To become orange.
    • 2007, Terézia Mora, Day in day out, page 296:
      Cranes in the distance against the background of the slowly oranging sky
    • 2008, Wanda Coleman, (Please provide the title of the work), page 14:
      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, page 330:
      "What about his eyes?" / "Nothing. No oranging at all, from what I could see.

See also

Colors in English · colors, colours (layout · text)
     red      green      yellow      cream      white
     crimson      magenta      teal      lime      pink
     indigo      blue      orange      gray, grey      violet
     black      purple      brown      azure, sky blue      cyan

Anagrams


French

Etymology

Short form of late Old French pume orenge or pomme d'orenge, which was calqued after Old Italian melarancia (mela + arancia). The o came into the word under influence of the place name Orange, from where these fruits came to the north. See orange (English).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ɔ.ʁɑ̃ʒ/
  • Rhymes: -ɑ̃ʒ
  • Homophone: oranges

Noun

orange f (plural oranges)

  1. orange (fruit)
    Il pressa l’orange afin d’en extraire du jus.
    He squeezed the orange to extract juice from it.

Noun

orange m (plural oranges)

  1. orange (color)

Derived terms

Adjective

orange m, f (invariable)

  1. orange
    Les premiers TGV atlantiques étaient orange.
    The first Atlantic TGV trains were orange.

Usage notes

While theoretically the adjective orange is invariable, being (originally) a colour name derived from a noun, the nonstandard plural oranges is in use.

Anagrams

See also

Colors in French · couleurs (layout · text)
     rouge      vert      jaune      crème      blanc
     cramoisi      magenta      bleu canard      vert citron      rose
     indigo      bleu      orange      gris      violet
     noir      pourpre      brun      azur      cyan

German

Etymology

From the noun Orange (orange fruit), from French orange.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /oˈrãːʃ/, /oˈraŋʃ/, /oˈrɔ̃ːʃ/, /oˈrɔŋʃ/

Adjective

orange (comparative oranger or orangener, superlative am orangesten or am orangensten)

  1. orange

Usage notes

  • The adjective has two sets of forms. In the formal standard language, endings are added directly to the stem (orang-). In less formal style and in the vernacular, a third set of forms is used in free variation, in which an -n- is infixed before the endings.
  • It is also officially correct to leave the adjective entirely undeclined. This usage is rare, however, and seems dated.

Declension

Standard forms
Colloquial forms

Luxembourgish

Etymology

Borrowing from French orange.

Adjective

orange (masculine orangen, neuter oranget, comparative méi orange, superlative am orangesten)

  1. orange

Declension

This adjective needs an inflection-table template.

See also

Colors in Luxembourgish · Faarwen (layout · text)
     rout      gréng      giel      ?      wäiss
     {{{crimson}}}      ?      ?      ?      ?
     ?      blo      orange      gro      ?
     schwaarz      mof      brong      ?      ?

Norman

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Old French.

Pronunciation

Adjective

orange m, f

  1. (Jersey, Guernsey) orange

Swedish

Etymology

From French orange. See orange (English).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ʊˈranɧ/, /ʊˈranɕ/

Adjective

orange (comparative orangeare, superlative orangeast)

  1. orange

Declension

Inflections of orange
Comparation by mer and mest
Indefinite
singular
Common orange
Neuter orange
Definite
singular
Masc. orange
All orange, orangea
Plural orange, orangea

Noun

orange ?

  1. orange (color)