Definitions Related words Phrases (New!) Mentions Lyrics History Colors (New!)
Color:
Chestnut


More info:
Wikipedia, ColorHexa


Colors with the same hue:
Maroon 
Deep Maroon
Deep Red
Barn red
Deep Burgundy
Dark red
OU Crimson red
Sangria
Medium red
Royal brown
Inferno Red
Rosso Corsa
International orange 
Signal Red
Burnt umber
Chili Red
Red strawberry
Nintendo red
Rustic Red
Paprika
Nearby colors:
Rum
Cognac
Red Ochre
Canyon Red
Burnt Copper
Nutmeg
Smokey Topaz
Brown 
Redwood
Sorrel
Peanut
Henna
Kobe
Sienna
Muddy Red
Dull Red
Liver 
Words evoked by this color:
canter,  equestrian,  gelding,  gallop,  trotting,  equine,  cheval,  pheasant,  hickory,  chestnut,  roasted,  chesterton,  tannin,  hereford,  chen,  cognac,  homestead,  homemade,  thoroughbred,  horse,  cordoba,  cordova,  nestle,  henna,  starving,  bradbury,  apocrypha,  crumple,  hogarth,  creak,  treadle,  painstaking,  galling,  wastrel,  toiling,  damaged,  contorted,  sarcastically,  painstakingly,  travail,  sputtered,  fumbled,  pillaged,  hob,  pillage,  rembrandt,  squatter,  squat,  stooping,  crouched
Literary analysis:
In literature, "chestnut" is often used as a rich, warm color that evokes natural beauty and depth. Authors frequently employ the term to describe hair, lending their characters an earthy elegance; for instance, phrases like "chestnut hair" and "bright chestnut locks" ([1], [2], [3], [4], [5]) emphasize both vibrancy and subtle warmth. Similarly, the color appears in descriptions of animal features and other natural elements, as seen in depictions of a "chestnut-maroon" shade or "dark chestnut spots" that contribute to a realistic and tactile portrayal of texture ([6], [7], [8], [9]). These uses underscore how the color chestnut functions not just as a visual detail, but as a literary device that enriches characterization and settings with a familiar, comforting glow.
  1. But to be a real beauty you’ve got to have blue eyes and golden or chestnut hair and a little mouth, or else black eyes and hair like Rosita’s.
    — from Patience Sparhawk and Her Times: A Novel by Gertrude Franklin Horn Atherton
  2. Madame de Frontignac laid her forehead on Mary's knee, and her long chestnut hair drooped down over her face.
    — from The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 04, No. 24, October, 1859 A Magazine of Literature, Art, and Politics by Various
  3. Sleek and trim were his bright chestnut locks; and his arms were damascened with silver, for he was one who loved the pomp and luxury of war.
    — from Harold : the Last of the Saxon Kings — Volume 03 by Lytton, Edward Bulwer Lytton, Baron
  4. added she, coquettishly tossing the chestnut tresses over her shoulders of ivory, “I fear we have been wasting time.
    — from The Maroon by Mayne Reid
  5. ‘You see my hair is chestnut, and I doubt me if pink suits the colour so well as forget-me-not.’
    — from Eve: A Novel by S. (Sabine) Baring-Gould
  6. The back is chestnut-maroon, shading off to whitish near the tail.
    — from Birds of the Plains by Douglas Dewar
  7. Its body resembles that of a beast, and is covered with hair of a light hue, interspersed with dark chestnut spots.
    — from Another World: Fragments from the Star City of Montalluyah by Benjamin Lumley
  8. Its chin, throat, and breast are chestnut-red, and on each cheek there is a patch of similar hue.
    — from Birds of the Indian Hills by Douglas Dewar
  9. v.c. timber 8 Slaty-gray; white eyebrow; abdomen rich chestnut; tail tipped white; f., faint white eyebrow.
    — from An Australian Bird Book: A Pocket Book for Field Use by John Albert Leach


Colors associated with the word:
Chestnut
Mahogany
Russet
Sienna
Umber
Maroon 
Burgundy
Copper
Hazel
Sepia
Burnt sienna
Coffee
Maple
Words with similar colors:
chesterton,  tannin,  hirsute,  russet,  oolong,  castaneda,  boar,  roux,  tress,  henna,  setter,  curly,  roasted,  mahoney,  brownell,  trot,  mahogany,  brandy,  cello,  coypu


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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