Definitions Related words Mentions Colors (New!)
Color:
Burnt Almond


More info:
ColorHexa


Colors with the same hue:
Chocolate 
Sepia
Truffle
Mud
Cappuccino
Metallic bronze
Copper
Ochre
Dingy Orange
Molten Gold
Tangerine
Bronze
Dark orange
Peru
Dull Orange
Mushroom
Sandy brown
Rajah
Macaroni and Cheese
Pale Peach
Nude
Seashell
Similar colors:
Ginger
Light brown
Ochre
Dingy Orange
Molten Gold
Brown
Bronze
Copper
Dull Orange
Char
Burnt orange
Golden brown
Bamboo
Peru
Metallic brown
Cadmium orange
Rust
Fulvous
Mahogany
Gold
Vivid vermilion
Harvest gold
Sandalwood
Flame
Toffee
Mandarin
Sinopia
Chocolate 
Curry
Dynamic
Words evoked by this color:
ginger,  raked,  orangutan,  baste,  erg,  mace,  spicer,  crunching,  crunch,  braise,  scald,  synge,  1979-80,  70-71,  burney,  hammond,  potash,  oriented,  hurled,  exerted,  thankful,  gumption,  late,  equinox,  hokie,  tex,  grange,  pukka,  gather,  cranky,  supper,  scully,  preheated,  burnside,  frazzle,  frazzled,  banked,  flannery,  cackle,  tempe,  bernardino,  durango,  hurston,  wiley,  ventured,  aphelion,  perseverance,  texan,  texas,  bobcat
Literary analysis:
In some literary texts the term "burnt almond" appears not as a tasty treat but as a distinct color—a warm, earthy hue that seems to capture a particular mood or aesthetic. Several entries read like catalog listings, for example, “Burnt Almond, 297” [1] and “Burnt Almonds 78 201” [2], suggesting that the color was precisely specified much like a pigment in an artist’s palette. Variations of the hue are also noted, with examples such as “Pink Burnt Almonds” [3, 4] hinting at a softer, perhaps more romantic variant, while one passage even mentions “Burnt Almonds—Red,” achieved with added cochineal [5], underscoring the color’s mutable, nuanced character. These references illustrate how authors have appropriated the term "burnt almond" to evoke rich tonalities and texture in their descriptions.

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This tab, the new OneLook "color thesaurus", is a work in progress. It draws from a data set of more than 2000 color names gathered from sources around the Web, and an analysis of how they are referenced in English texts. Some words, like "peach", function as both a color name and an object; when you do a search for words like these, you will see both of the above sections.



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