The name 'Orange' comes from Tamil word 'Aru' ('Or') meaning 'Six' + 'Anju' ('ange') meaning 'five'. The fruit typically has eleven pieces inside which when you cut into half has six ('Aru') pieces in one half and five ('Anju') pieces on the other.' Range, gran, nag, negro, nor, gore, ore, one, and probably lots more.
orange
safron is the other word for orange
The word "pip" is sometimes used.
pull ripe even more
segments
The Arabic word for orange is "burtokal". This means orange as a color. And orange as a fruit. Either of those could work on the word.
The Latin word for orange is aranjia.
The Latin word for orange is aranjia.
The word 'orange' has 2 syllables. O-range.
Machungwa is the Kikuyu word for the English word orange.
'Orange' in either of its uses (as a noun or as an adjective) has no antonym; the only way to negate something being orange is to have it be 'not-orange', either explicitly so or implicitly, in being another colour for example.Another PerspectiveThe reverse of orange on the color wheel is blue.
The word orange originated in Middle England. The first known use of the word orange appeared in the 14th century.