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ColorSee: Eye color. See also: EYCL1; EYCL2; EYCL3.
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ColorSee: Skin color.
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ColorRelationships Related Term: monochrome n. ~ 1. A property of an object that is determined by the wavelengths of light it reflects or transmits, giving it the appearance of red, blue, green, yellow, o [..]
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ColorA key determinant of a wine's age and quality; white wines grow darker in color as they age while red wines turn brownish orange.
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Colorlate 14c.; see color (n.); earliest use is figurative. Related: Colored; coloring.
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Colorearly 13c., "skin color, complexion," from Old French color "color, complexion, appearance" (Modern French couleur), from Latin color "color of the skin; color in general, hue [..]
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ColorThe perceived hue of an object, produced by the manner in which it reflects or emits light into the eye. Also, a substance, such as a dye, pigment, or paint, that imparts a hue. Related: Andy Warhol. [..]
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ColorThe hue or shade of a beer, primarily derived from grains, sometimes derived from fruit or other ingredients in beer. Beer styles made with caramelized, toasted or roasted malts or grains will exhibit [..]
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ColorThe characteristic color or colors present in a mineral. See Color in Mineral Properties.
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ColorThe visual perception of light that enables human eyes to differentiate between wavelengths of the visible spectrum, with the longest wavelengths appearing red and the shortest appearing blue or viole [..]
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ColorColor is one of the most difficult areas in digital imaging to specify, digitally encode, and reproduce, and for the verification that specifications have been met. The primary reason it is so challen [..]
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ColorColor plays a role in affecting viewer's moods and appetites. Tip: use a Light Hand.
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Colorpaint with hue
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ColorThe banner for a military unit.
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Color(film) a phenomenon of light or visual perception that enables one to differentiate otherwise identical objects caused by differing qualities of the light reflected or emitted; contrast to black and w [..]
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ColorColor of dog breed
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Colorkolir
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Colorfarb
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Colora legal claim to or appearance of a right or authority [threats that gave to an act of self-defense] usually used in the phrase under color of [a police officer held liable for violating the ...
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ColorThe color we see when we view a bird. This can be more complicated than we imagine. The color of everything that we see is the result of the light waves that are reflected back to us. If we see a whit [..]
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ColorChange
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ColorTrials
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ColorSubtle speech nuances that give texture and shading to words to make them interesting and meaningful.
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ColorAttenuation index, determined by absorption of light under defined conditions. Generally measured using the ICUMSA method at 420 nm, and referred to as ICUMSA units or IU.
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ColorThe visual perception of light associated with its frequency or wave length.
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ColorA property of quarks and gluons. Gluons can exchange color between quarks and other gluons. This process is the origin of the strong force. It has nothing to do with the color perceived by the human eye.
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ColorThe spectral composition of visible light.
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ColorColor refers to the appearance of a legal claim to a right, authority, or office. For example color of title, under color of state law.
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ColorThe name of the java.awt.Color class to define a colour with 8 bits each of red, green, blue and alpha transparency. Most of the interesting information about colours in general is under the colour en [..]
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Color(n) a visual attribute of things that results from the light they emit or transmit or reflect(n) interest and variety and intensity(n) the timbre of a musical sound(n) a race with skin pigmentation di [..]
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ColorA physical property test that identifies the coloring of a mineral (Lesson 27)
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Color(n.) (a.) Of an object, a visual property that depends on wavelength; (b) an arbitrary name assigned to a property that distinguishes three kinds of quarks.
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ColorUsed to describe colored wastewater discharge from chemical pulping, pulp bleaching or colored-paper manufacture. The wastewater is colored by the lignin and lignin derivatives present in spent cookin [..]
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ColorThe visual appearance of an object that can be described in terms of hue, value, and chroma. Colors …
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ColorA single burst of color stars.
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ColorAn asymmetrical break of colored stars with multiple whistling of "screaming" serpents followed by a bottom shot or heavy report.
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Colorsee tone color
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ColorColor is a measure of reflected wavelengths of light. Colors are also only useful to organisms that can see with the visible spectrum of light. An element like gold may have a yellow color while mercu [..]
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Colora quality of light, depending on its wavelength. Spectral color of an emission of light is its place in the rainbow spectrum. Perceived color (or visual color) is the quality of light emission as conv [..]
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ColorThe visually perceived property of objects created by Absorption or reflection of specific wavelengths of Light.
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ColorColor of the Iris.
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ColorColor of Hair or fur.
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ColorA generic term referring inclusively to visible lightwaves in the spectrum, and white and black. Color is described by three properties: hue, lightness, and saturation:
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ColorThe substances in water that impart a yellowish-brown color to the water. These substances are the result of iron and manganese ions, humus and peat materials, plankton, aquatic weeds, and industrial [..]
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ColorDetermines the coloration level. MCL – 5 units.
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ColorOne of the most important properties used in determining minerals. Some minerals always show the same color, while others come in many different ones. The color of metallic (or metal-bearing) minerals [..]
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ColorThe characteristic color or colors of a mineral. (See Color in mineral properties)
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ColorColor is the most important aspect of a gemstone. Intense, vibrant colors generally garner the greatest value. Gemologists view color as a combination of three components: hue, saturation, and tone. Hue refers to various wavelengths of light that correspond to the colors seen in a rainbow. This represents the full spectrum of white light. Saturatio [..]
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ColorA rarely used term that distinguishes suit-play from notrump play. In the bidding, to “change the color” means to bid a new suit. The term is virtually synonymous with “suit.” In non-English languages [..]
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Color(1) red or black; sometime method of referring to suits: spades and clubs are the black suits, hearts and diamonds are the red suits
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ColorRefers to the respective armies (White & Black) and also to the checkered-pattern of squares on the chessboard, which is made up of "light-color squares" and "dark-color squares".
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ColorThe visual perception of light that enables human eyes to differentiate between wavelengths of the visible spectrum, with the longest wavelengths appearing red and the shortest appearing blue or violet.
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ColorA text value for the line color of a particular train. Possible values are: BLUE, GREEN, ORANGE, RED, YELLOW, BEIGE and WHITE. (WHITE represents trains that were added and have not been given a specif [..]
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ColorProduced when light strikes an object and then reflects back to your eyes. The methods used for color specification today belong to a technique known as colorimetry and consist of accurate scientific [..]
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ColorA visual attribute of things that results from the light they emit or transmit or reflect; the visual response to the wavelengths of light, identified as red, blue, green, etc.; primary and secondary colors; warm, cool, and neutral colors, color value; hue; and intensity.
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ColorWhat is perceived when waves of light strike the retina. Color is an element of art.
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ColorProduced by light of various wavelengths, and when light strikes and object and reflects back to the eyes. One of the elements of art. Color has hue (color name), intensity and value. (See ArtLex for [..]
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ColorColor ( or timbre - pronounced "TAM-ber") includes all the aspects of a sound that do not have anything to do with how high or low it is, how loud or soft, or how long or short. In o [..]
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ColorA generic term referring exclusively to all colors of the spectrum, including white and black. Color is described by three properties: hue, lightness and saturation. (1) Hue (color, character, domin [..]
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Color The color of a gemstone is caused by the absorption and reflection properties of elements and impurities contained within the base mineral. Gemstone colors are considered either idiochromatic allochromatic or pseudoisochromatic. Idiochromatic coloration is due to the inherent chemical makeup of the mineral. Allochromatic coloration is due to th [..]
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ColorSee Colour.
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ColorFor color terms, see Color Manual.
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Color
(uncountable) The spectral composition of visible light
''Humans and birds can perceive color.''
(countable) A particular set of visible spectral compositions, perceived or named as a class.
' [..]
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