Colours do not have gender. Anyone can wear any colour they like and want to.
Just a word of advise, most of it is in your attitude. It helps if the colour looks good on you, but if you want to wear a colour there really isn't a "colour police" out there that will stop you.
feminine when it's a fruit & masculine when it's the color orange
In French, the word "orange" is considered to be a masculine noun.
Arancio conversationally and arancia as the fruit, arancio as the color or tree, and arancione as the color are Italian equivalents of the English word "color."Specifically, the masculine word arancio can be heard colloquially, conversationally, informally and locally to designate the color, fruit and tree. But historically the feminine noun arancia identifies the edible fruit of the orange tree. The masculine noun arancio indicates the orange tree (Citrus x sinensis) and oftentimes the color. The feminine/masculine adjective arancione properly refers to the color.The respective pronunciations in Italian will be "a-RAN-tcha" for the fruit, "a-RAN-tcho" for the color and tree, and "A-ran-TCHO-ney" for the color.
the answer is "The color of an orange"
Orange is the color Orange because of capital letters but with capital it is the fruit orange
Simply a lighter orange and and a more orange yellow.
Nothing happened to the orange color on the outside of an orange
Tangerines are typically orange in color, which is a brighter shade of the color orange.
In French, "orange juice" is translated as "jus d'orange." The noun "jus" (juice) is masculine, so the phrase is considered masculine in gender. However, the word "orange" itself is feminine, but it is used here as an adjective to describe the type of juice.
the color orange
The color of oranges can be yellow or orange.
The gender of a word is completely contingent on the language in question. Orange in French and Spanish is feminine (une orange, una naranja). Orange in Arabic and Hebrew is masculine (portoqaal, tapuz).