The word brown could be either an adjective or a verb.Adjective: The house is brown.Verb: Turn down the heat after you brown the steak.
The word 'racist' is an adjective, as it describes a person or action, e.g. "He was making racist remarks about the colour of my skin."
If you are referring to a dry, possibly hard, thin baked cake it is a noun. It can be an adjective as in 'having a biscuit colour'
Here are some possibilities :COLOR - a hue or tint (in the UK colour)COOLER (adjective, noun) - having a lower temperature, or a picnic container
The old, dilapidated shed was beginning to lose colour when we decided to move out.
It means a colour as an adjective
Noun or adjective
Lemon green and pink
# Color/colour, noun: purple # adjective: purplish, purply
The word ultraviolet is an adjective. The colour form is a noun.
The word brown could be either an adjective or a verb.Adjective: The house is brown.Verb: Turn down the heat after you brown the steak.
Khaki can be a noun and an adjective. It's a noun because it's the name of a colour. It's an adjective because it can describe something, like a khaki uniform.
The word coloured is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb colour. It can also be an adjective.
"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.
As you are using the plural, that means you are talking about the fruit so here it is a plural noun. If you use 'orange' in the singular that could mean the fruit or the colour of the fruit. In the second case it would be an adjective.
The word 'racist' is an adjective, as it describes a person or action, e.g. "He was making racist remarks about the colour of my skin."
Rust is a noun. However, when used with an object it is a verb (to make rust coloured). It can be an adjective (having the rust colour).