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


More info:
Wikipedia, ColorHexa


Colors with the same hue:
Rust Red
Soy Sauce Brown
Metallic brown
Rust
Tobacco
Sien
Coconut
Henna
Spicy mix
Sorrel
Persimmon
Tangelo
International orange 
Willpower orange
Orange 
Maximum orange
Bold Orange
Flame
Vivid orange
Vivid red-tangelo
Nearby colors:
Sinopia
Lemon iced tea
Sunburst
Burnt orange
Rust Orange
Tenné
Vermilion
Tomato sauce
Chili Red
Vivid vermilion
International orange 
Cinnabar
Orange Soda
Mordant red 19
Rufous
Bamboo
Words evoked by this color:
knotty,  woodson,  cello,  bassoon,  woodhouse,  spinet,  harwood,  newel,  pulpit,  carved,  woodwork,  bureau,  sideboard,  floored,  lecturn,  lectern,  carver,  escritoire,  stave,  chest,  madeira,  mahoney,  confessional,  malacca,  mahogany,  castanets,  violinist,  roundtable,  mahon,  varnish,  varnished,  armoire,  luthier,  paneled,  guitar,  setter,  ingrained,  fiddler,  burly,  brawny,  craftsmen,  craftsman,  tomahawk,  kestrel,  freckled,  vulpine,  foxy,  plough,  creaking,  peroxidation
Literary analysis:
In literature, mahogany is evoked not just as a finished wood but as a vivid, deep reddish-brown hue that enriches character and scene. Authors employ mahogany as a descriptor to evoke warmth and intensity, as when a character is depicted with a "mahogany-hued" quality that immediately sets him apart [1]. Such descriptions extend to the human face—sunburnt, rich, and deep in tone [2, 3]—and even to more unexpected subjects like a duck portrayed as "Spanish mahogany," which infuses an exotic color note into the narrative [4]. This color usage often suggests not only physical characteristics—a withered skin the color of mahogany [5] or an object of rich, dark allure [6]—but also serves as a metaphor for depth and endurance in the emotional landscape of the work [7].
  1. “He said,” Tuckerman answered, “‘Find the mahogany-hued man with the long, skinny legs and look in his breast pocket.’” “Exactly,” said Ben slowly.
    — from Peter Cotterell's Treasure by Rupert Sargent Holland
  2. His hair, which is of dark chestnut and inclined to curl, was combed back from a medium forehead, and his face was sun-burnt into a rich mahogany hue.
    — from Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, Volume 11, No. 25, April, 1873 by Various
  3. It was very hot, and the climb made his mahogany-coloured face darker than before.
    — from Bahama Bill, Mate of the Wrecking Sloop Sea-Horse by T. Jenkins (Thornton Jenkins) Hains
  4. But Alice was fiery red and the duck a Spanish mahogany.
    — from Bliss, and other stories by Katherine Mansfield
  5. He was a little shriveled wisp of a man, with a withered skin the color of mahogany.
    — from Great Sea Stories
  6. A dark reddish-brown form, known to collectors as the "mahogany form," seems to be somewhat rare.
    — from The Moths of the British Isles, First Series Comprising the Families Sphingidæ to Noctuidæ by Richard South
  7. He wore a beard, and his face was burnt to the colour of mahogany, which had a strange effect in contrast to the bluest of Saxon eyes.
    — from From One Generation to Another by Henry Seton Merriman


Colors associated with the word:
Mahogany
Burgundy
Chestnut
Maroon 
Russet
Sienna
Umber
Claret
Wine
Garnet
Copper
Burnt sienna
Red Ochre
Words with similar colors:
malacca,  castanets,  mahoney,  mahon,  basso,  madeira,  crabbed,  confessional,  violinist,  cello,  bassoon,  redwood,  snag,  liver,  burly,  longer,  venison,  ingrain,  sherry,  roundtable


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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