The phrase "in the red" is a business term used to describe a business that is spending more money than they are making. This refers to one that is losing money.
Retired and Extremely Dangerous. R.E.D
phrase. If a person or company is in the red or if their bank account is in the red, they have spent more money than they have in their account and therefore they owe money to the bank.
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Caught red handed
red with wind
The phrase "as red as a turkey gobbler's wattle" in "Where the Red Fern Grows" describes a bright red color similar to the wattle, or the fleshy skin hanging from a turkey's throat. In this context, it symbolizes the vibrant and intense hue of the red ferns that stand out among the greenery in the story.
Your face usually turns red when you are embarrassed, so this phrase means that someone was ashamed of something.
The prepositional phrase in the sentence is "with red hair."
It means that you owe more money than you have. You are on the minus side of your income.
"Red" on its own is not a phrase. A phrase is more like a sentence, or a group of words. The word 'red' is a noun and an adjective; the name of a colour, and the colour of an object.
"Me gusta un rojo" means "I like a red one" in English. It is a phrase in Spanish expressing a preference for something that is red in color.
In the phrase, "Charging at the red cloak, the bull missed his mark," the participle phrase is "charging at the red cloak." It is a participle phrase because it works as an adjective in the sentence.