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Color:
Wenge


More info:
Wikipedia, ColorHexa


Colors with the same hue:
Molasses
Cabernet
Rosewood
Old burgundy
Prune
Carmine
Bordeaux
Metallic red
Cherry Red
Madder Lake
Deep chestnut
Imperial red
Redwood
Jasper
Faded Red
Melon
Similar colors:
Fig
Liver
Carbon
Old burgundy
Hemp
Roast coffee
Tin
Eclipse
Currant
Clove
Musk
Sable
Bole
Burnished brown
Tobacco
Cinereous
Espresso
Garnet
Merlot
Umber
Wine
Cordovan
Redwood
Auberg
Catawba
Rosy
Temptress
Old rose
Root beer
Licorice
Words evoked by this color:
umberto,  umbo,  swarthy,  blackwood,  ebenezer,  melanin,  nubian,  exclusively,  havana,  eggplant,  moussaka,  aubergine,  waldorf,  indigent,  countertop,  monumental,  stone,  stones,  sarcophagus,  pierre,  sculpted,  boar,  firenze,  wrought,  blacksmith,  andiron,  germanic,  iron,  farrier,  forge,  ferro,  ferrous,  ferromagnetic,  teutonic,  magnetism,  draftsman,  graphite,  staub,  hexagonal,  dower,  culver,  nebulochaotic,  neb,  ailanthus,  pyramidal,  tunisian,  alexandria,  minaret,  sphinx,  bole
Literary analysis:
Although modern usage of “wenge” is most often associated with a deep, dark brown—the color of exotic African hard woods—the examples provided do not offer any instances of the term being used to describe a hue. Instead, these texts employ “wenge” in contexts that clearly pertain to actions or names rather than color (for example, see [1], [2], and [3]). In other words, while contemporary literature and design have embraced “wenge” as a descriptor of a rich, earthy tone, the cited examples reflect an earlier literary tradition where the word carried entirely different connotations, leaving no evidence of its use as a color term.
  1. Throw out the stour full fast fechtand he socht, With Goddis grace to wenge him gif he mocht.
    — from Wallace; or, the Life and Acts of Sir William Wallace, of Ellerslie by active 1470-1492 Blind Hary
  2. Be he was fallyn, the twa than lichtyt doun; To wenge his dede to Wallace maid thaim boun.
    — from Wallace; or, the Life and Acts of Sir William Wallace, of Ellerslie by active 1470-1492 Blind Hary
  3. And quhen thai saw that it awaillit nocht, His purposs was to wenge him, at he mocht, 40 On Sothron blud, quhilk has his eldris slayne.
    — from Wallace; or, the Life and Acts of Sir William Wallace, of Ellerslie by active 1470-1492 Blind Hary

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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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