I studied ancient history
etymology
Arabic, 'naranj', as the name of the fruit. This became 'orenge', then 'orange', meaning the fruit originally, and then the colour of the fruit too, in the 16th century.
The word anonymous derives from Greek anonymos, from an- (without) and onyma (onoma: name).
400 BC in ancient Egypt
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.
safron is the other word for orange
The word orange originated in Middle England. The first known use of the word orange appeared in the 14th century.
No, the word 'orange' is a noun, a word for a type of fruit, a word for a thing; and and adjective, a word that describes a noun as the color orange. Examples:noun: I put a sliced orange in you lunch.adjective: She wore orange shoes with a hot pink dress.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. The pronoun that takes the place of the noun orange is it. Example:I put an orange in your lunch. I sliced it and wrapped it.
orange
In French, the word "orange" is considered to be a masculine noun.
There are a couple, but not a huge amount of different definitions for the word orange. Orange can mean the color "Orange", or it can mean the citrus fruit orange.
The word arani is known for being the Indian word for orange. The color orange that described by the word arani is often a dark or burnt orange, rather than a bright colored orange.