to colour

listen to the pronunciation of to colour
الإنجليزية - التركية
{i} renk

Yeşil, benim en sevdiğim renktir. - Green is my favourite colour.

Gökkuşağının bütün renkleri siyahtır. - All the colours of the rainbow are black.

boya

Tom ve Mary Paskalya için birkaç yumurta boyadı. - Tom and Mary coloured some eggs for Easter.

Son zamanlarda düşen kar, dağı beyaza boyadı, bu gerçekten güzel. - The snow that fell recently has coloured the mountain white, it is truly beautiful.

{f} kızarmak
{f} renk vermek
{f} boyamak
{f} renk katmak
renklenmek
boya renklendirmek
işaret
müstehcen
sancak
(Kanun) bahane
kaba
to the colour
(Askeri) selam borusu
colour
canlılık
colour
hareketlilik
colour
yüzü kızarmak
colour
renklendirmek
colour
renk değiştirmek
colour
{f} renklendir

Onun yerine bana söyleyebilir misin, neden ekrandaki gezegenler oldukları şekilde renklendirilmiştir? - Can you tell me instead, why the planets on the screen are coloured the way they are?

colour
renk duyumu
colour
etkilemek
colour
tüs
colour
colour kızar/etkile/boya
colour
{i} ten rengi

İnsanlar ten rengine göre yargılanıyor. - People are judged by their skin colour.

colour
{i} forma
colour
{i} içyüzü
colour
{i} dış görünüş
colour
{i} ton
colour
{f} abartmak
colour
{i} nüans
colour
{f} saptırmak
colour
{i} coşkunluk
colour
{i} maske
colour
{f} çarpıtmak
colour
{i} yüz rengi
colour
{i} bet beniz
colour
(Tekstil) 1. renk 2. boya 3. renk vermek, boyamak
colour
i., f., İng., bak. color
colour
{i} gerçek yüz
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
To affect without completely changing

That interpretation certainly colours my perception of the book.

Any of the coloured balls excluding the reds
To give something colour

We could colour the walls red.

An award for sporting achievement, particularly within a school or university

He was awarded colours for his football.

To attribute a quality to

Colour me confused.

A standard or banner

The loss of their colours destroyed the regiment's morale.

The system of colour television

This film is broadcast in colour.

The spectral composition of visible light

Humans and birds can perceive colour.

: Any of the standard dark tinctures used in a coat of arms, including azure, gules, sable, and vert. Contrast with metal
The relative lightness or darkness of a mass of written or printed text on a page
Of a face: To become red through increased blood flow, implying due to strong emotion

Her face coloured as she realised her mistake.

{f} add color, distort, falsify (also color)
{i} shade, tint, hue (also color)
{s} using or having colour (also color)
col·our colours colouring coloured in AM, use color
To color
encolor
colour
Light waves that reach the viewer's eye by transmission (through an object between the viewer and the light source) or by reflection (when light waves bounce off an object) All substances, whether transparent or opaque, absorb some wavelengths while letting others pass through or bounce off A red apple looks red because it absorbs all colours in white light except red, which it reflects White objects reflect all and black objects absorb all light waves (at least in theory)
colour
To apply colours to the areas within the boundaries of a line drawing using coloured markers or crayons
colour
If you colour something, you use something such as dyes or paint to change its colour. Many women begin colouring their hair in their mid-30s We'd been making cakes and colouring the posters The petals can be cooked with rice to colour it yellow. + colouring col·our·ing They could not afford to spoil those maps by careless colouring
colour
A sports team's colours are the colours of the clothes they wear when they play. I was wearing the team's colours. see also coloured, colouring
colour
The plural "colours" is often used, even for a single flag, because the name derives from the colours composing the FIELD of the flag There are three meanings for colours representing increasing specialization (1) It is a general term describing any flag which is flown to denote nationality (2) When used in reference to ships, it refers to the collectively to the ship's ENSIGN, JACK and FLAG or PENNANT (3) When used in reference to a military unit, it is the unique pair of consecrated flags carried by the unit These constitute the Regimental (or Company, Battalion, etc ) Colour which represents the unit itself, and the Queen's (or King's) Colour which represents the higher allegiance
colour
modify or bias; "His political ideas color his lectures"
colour
The colour of the suit in question Clubs and Spades are black Diamonds and Hearts are red Black is the opposite of red and vice versa
colour
politeness People of colour are people who belong to a race with dark skins. Black communities spoke up to defend the rights of all people of color
colour
Property carried by quarks andgluons which determines their strong interactions in a way analogous to that in which electric charge determines electromagnetic interactions Leptons carry no colour, and so do not experience the strong force
colour
If something colours your opinion, it affects the way that you think about something. The attitude of the parents toward the usefulness of what is learned must colour the way children approach school. = affect
colour
Human skin tone, especially as an indicator of race or ethnicity
colour
having or capable of producing colors; "color film"; "he rented a color television"; "marvelous color illustrations"
colour
(verb) To colour up, to turn red in the face; to blush
colour
Any of the standard dark tinctures used in a coat of arms, including azure, gules, sable, and vert. Contrast with metal
colour
A colour is a substance you use to give something a particular colour. Dyes and make-up are sometimes referred to as colours. The Body Shop Herbal Hair Colour It is better to avoid all food colours. the latest lip and eye colours
colour
Hue as opposed to achromatic colours (black, white and greys)
colour
Colour is a quality that makes something especially interesting or exciting. She had resumed the travel necessary to add depth and colour to her novels. see also local colour
colour
a visual attribute of things that results from the light they emit or transmit or reflect; "a white color is made up of many different wavelengths of light"
colour
n [{US=color}] warna
colour
affect as in thought or feeling; "My personal feelings color my judgment in this case"; "The sadness tinged his life"
colour
Colours, whether described in words or shown in images, often have symbolic significance that contributes to meaning See Exploring Language, page 189
colour
If you see someone in their true colours or if they show their true colours, you realize what they are really like. The children are seeing him in his true colours for the first time now Here, the organization has had time to show its true colours, to show its inefficiency and its bungling. Aspect of any object that may be described in terms of hue, brightness, and saturation. It is associated with the visible wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation, which stimulate the sensor cells of the eye. Red light has the longest wavelengths, while blue has the shortest, with other colours such as orange, yellow, and green between. Hue refers to dominant wavelengths. Brightness refers to the intensity or degree of shading. Saturation pertains to purity, or the amount of white light mixed with a hue. The colours red, green, and blue, known as primary colours, can be combined in varying proportions to produce all other colours. Primary colours combined in equal proportions produce secondary colours. Two colours that combine to form white light are said to be complementary. colour blindness colour index colour printing four colour map problem
colour
the timbre of a musical sound; "the recording fails to capture the true color of the original music"
colour
is a small piece of precious opal
colour
Interest, especially in a selective area
colour
gloss or excuse; "color a lie"
colour
any material used for its color; "she used a different color for the trim"
colour
The interaction between the way our eyes work and the way light falls on objects creates the phenomenon of colour We are capable of distinguishing between 10 million nuances of colour, although there are only 11 basic colour terms in the English language - black, white, red, orange, yellow, green, blue, purple, pink, brown and grey Since the 17th century, scientists and artists alike have recognised that colour is important in designing and selling products
colour
The perception of the human eye to the visible spectrum of light radiation White light contains radiation at all wavelengths of the visible spectrum Particular colours or hues occur when the reflected radiation contains only wavelengths from a limited part of the spectrum (See hue, chroma, tint, tone, and value)
colour
as calculated from Wien's law or from the colour index
colour
A country's national colours are the colours of its national flag. The Opera House is decorated with the Hungarian national colours: green, red and white
colour
A colour television, photograph, or picture is one that shows things in all their colours, and not just in black, white, and grey. In Japan 99 per cent of all households now have a colour television set
colour
All colours shown on this web site and any presentation material can only be generally representative of the actual colours Only physical samples can offer a virtually exact colour match (subject to batch differences) No dyed fabrics can ever be identical between different batches
colour
Sets the colour for the geological code
colour
Some chatting rooms give the option of typing your messages in different colours One assumes this is meant to make the place look more attractive, but there's a sneaking suspicion that it's really to start up an argument as to whether "colour" should have a U in it or not
colour
An element of art and design that pertains to a particular hue One or any mixture of pigments seen when light is reflected off a surface
colour
Produced when light strikes an object and then reflects back to your eyes
colour
change color, often in an undesired manner; "The shirts discolored"
colour
interest and variety and intensity; "the Puritan Period was lacking in color"
colour
The colour of something is the appearance that it has as a result of the way in which it reflects light. Red, blue, and green are colours. `What colour is the car?' --- `Red.' Her silk dress was sky-blue, the colour of her eyes Judi's favourite colour is pink The badges come in twenty different colours and shapes
colour
politeness Someone's colour is the colour of their skin. People often use colour in this way to refer to a person's race. I don't care what colour she is He acknowledged that Mr Taylor's colour and ethnic origins were utterly irrelevant in the circumstances
colour
add color to; "The child colored the drawings"; "Fall colored the trees"; "colorize black and white film"
colour
(English)
colour
A particular set of visible spectral compositions, perceived or named as a class
colour
Soil colour of the B horizon can be indicated to a varying degree using the terms Rhodic, Rubic, Chromic and Xanthic Preferably these terms should be limited to soils having an argic or ferralic horizon, or applied in Cambisols and Arenosols In Vertisols the term Pellic is used to indicate dark coloured soils
colour
an outward or token appearance or form that is deliberately misleading; "he hoped his claims would have a semblance of authenticity"; "he tried to give his falsehood the gloss of moral sanction"; "the situation soon took on a different color"
colour
Colour depends on light because it is made of light there must be light for us to see colour A red shirt will not look red in the dark, where there is no light the whiter the light,, the more true the colors will be A yellow light on a full colour painting will change the appearance of all the colours
colour
People sometimes refer to the flag of a particular part of an army, navy, or air force, or the flag of a particular country as its colours. Troops raised the country's colors in a special ceremony. the battalion's colours
colour
If you pass a test with flying colours, you have done very well in the test. So far McAllister seemed to have passed all the tests with flying colors
colour
decorate with colors; "color the walls with paint in warm tones"
colour
It is important to note that every faculty/operating unit has its own designated colours that must be used Please refer to the Corporate Style Guide for Printed Publications
colour
Used to replace the word "Flavour" when describing various foods "What colour ice cream* you want grape?" *see: Ice Cream
colour
A property of quarks, with three values called red, green, and blue, which they can exchange by passing gluons
colour
If a film or television programme is in colour, it has been made so that you see the picture in all its colours, and not just in black, white, or grey. Was he going to show the film? Was it in colour?
to colour
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