yellow-red
See also: yellowred
English
Alternative forms
- yellowred (uncommon)
Etymology
From Middle English *yelwered, *ȝeoluread, from Old English ġeolurēad (“reddish yellow, orange”), equivalent to yellow + red.
Adjective
yellow-red (comparative more yellow-red, superlative most yellow-red)
- Of a colour between yellow and red; orange.
- 1953, Sailing Directions for Northern U.S.S.R., page 20:
- The spar buoy is a red and white horizontally striped pole with a yellow top and has a yellow-red ball at the top and a yellow triangular flag beneath the ball.
- 1953, International Review of Cytology, volume 2, page 86:
- After a few days the silver appeared to become more colloidal and the sections were stained a yellow-red color.
- 2008, Traci L. Slatton, Immortal, page 6:
- I'd been told many times that my yellow-red hair and peach skin were beautiful, that their contrast with my dark eyes was compelling.
- 2010, Alexandra Livingston, Defy the Gods, page 8:
- Her yellow-red eyes reflected the torches on either side of her throne. A black cape with a crimson lining finished the outfit, connecting to two red stones on her fingers. She could drop any mortal man dead just by her looks.
- yellow-red:
- Consisting of yellow and red colours individually.
Noun
yellow-red (plural yellow-reds)
- The colour orange.
- 1930, Benson H. Paul, C. A. Plaskett, Charles Nicholas Ainslie, A Method for Determining the Color of Agricultural Products:
- Obviously one will be red, but will the other hue be a yellow-red (orange) or a red-purple?
- 2017, Jim Long, The New Munsell Student Color Set, page 33:
- The cultural meanings associated with yellow and yellow-red (orange) are varied.
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