How to use in sentence of “colour”

How to use in-sentence of “colour”:

+ The tone of magenta used in printing is called “printer’s magenta” and it is shown in the colour chart below.

+ For example, a blue colour is given by tiny amounts of cobalt oxide.

+ Animal colour is produced by light reflecting from an animal’s surface.

+ The first recorded use of “mallow” as a colour name in English was in 1611.

+ The caterpillars can sense the twig’s colour with their skin and match their body colour to the background to protect themselves from predators.

+ While this means the animal is not capable of changing its skin colour in the dramatic fashion of shallow-dwelling cephalopods, such trickery is not needed at the pitch black depths in which it lives.

+ Pharaoh Hounds always have a bright orange colour coat.

How to use in sentence of colour
How to use in sentence of colour

Example sentences of “colour”:

+ His scientific ideas about colour then led him to develop a different painting technique.

+ Its colour is light grey, greenish gray, or red.

+ The programme changed from sepia to colour film, and the toys in the shop would come to life.

+ In 1994, Bernard Meehan, Keeper of Manuscripts at Trinity College Dublin, produced an introductory booklet on the Book of Kells, with 110 colour images of the manuscript.

+ Like other types of working dog, Welsh Sheepdogs are normally bred for their herding abilities rather than appearance, and so they are different in build, colour and size.

+ It can occur in rare colour morphs, one with yellow hindwings and body and one with extended black on hindwings.

+ In 2003, a committee of the Scottish Parliament met to examine a petition that the Scottish Government adopt the Pantone 300 colour as a standard.

+ The main reason for colour change is for communication with other chameleons and for controlling body temperature.

+ People with color blindness British spelling is colour blindness; another term is colour vision deficiency.

+ The bile then gets mixed with blood and this gives a yellow colour to the skin.

+ His scientific ideas about colour then led him to develop a different painting technique.

+ Its colour is light grey, greenish gray, or red.

+ Based on his experiments with turbid media, Goethe characterized colour as arising from the dynamic interplay of darkness and light.

+ They are usually olive, bronze, light brown, grey-brown or even silver-grey in colour with a white belly.

+ Human skin colour is one of the most easily seen features of a person.

+ The colour of their fur is usually yellow-ginger, but can sometimes include tan, black, white or sandy colours.

+ The colour red was chosen to make them easy to spot.

+ The golden colour then comes when they are 55–70cm long, but fades when they become mature.

+ In his book, Goethe shows how colour is perceived in a variety of circumstances, and considers Isaac Newton’s observations to be special cases.

More in-sentence examples of “colour”:

+ She also sometimes uses colour symbolically.

+ Acrylic paint can give a much brighter, more vivid colour than oil paints.

+ The fruit looks like a rough small and yellow grapefruit, and changes colour from green to yellow when it becomes more ripe.

+ This means that its radiation, which gives it a blue or white colour at the start, lessens over time.

+ His favourite colour is striped.

+ Flowers, with their colour and their nectar, act to attract pollinators, which are mostly insects and birds.

+ The colour of Murdoc’s skin has changed over the years from a dark greenish olive to a lime-green colour, however the cause of this is unknown.

+ As they mature, their leaves change colour from pink-tinted to green.

+ An example is the gene for blossom colour in many species of flower.

+ The main colour of the soft, Woolwooly coat is ochre, light cinnamon, or reddish brown.

+ Eye colour is an example of structural colour which varies according to the lighting conditions, especially for lighter-coloured eyes.

+ There are also definitions of colours based on the colour wheel: primary colour, secondary and tertiary colours.

+ Then he estimated the boundaries of each of the outcrops of rock, filled them in with colour and ended up with a crude geological map.

+ His use of colour and light, however, is typical of the Venetian School.

+ The people of Thailand call the colour “rain-cloud gray” and the shimmer “sea foam.” This cat has one coat of fur that is short.

+ For example, if the picture to display was just a white screen, the screens processor would only calculate the colour once and use the same calculation for the whole screen.

+ The works of his early maturity were typically Impressionist snapshots of real life, full of sparkling colour and light.

+ This is usually not condidered as true colour blindness.

+ Their respective choices are down to the colour red being associated with the Labour Party, and blue with the Conservative Party.

+ He used planes of colour and small brushstrokes that build up to form complex fields.

+ Skin colour is inherited and is the result of natural selection.

+ This pattern of colour plus behaviour is quite common.

+ The colour of the seats are blue and claret because Villa’s traditional home colours are claret and blue.

+ Most of her paintings are minimalist in style, combining basic shapes of colour with dotted fields or lines.

+ Then came “The Clangers” 1969-1974 which was their first colour production.

+ Its colour varied from a grizzled grey through fawn orange-brown.

+ He felt that this arising of colour at light-dark boundaries was fundamental to the creation of the spectrum.

+ At first, the light coloured moths survived better because they were camouflaged against the light colour of the nearby trees.

+ The colour of the flowers can tell you how much acid is in the soil the plant is growing in.

+ In the “Lego Mindstorms NXT 2.0” is new Colour sensor.

+ The long, narrow leaves are slightly greyish in colour and rise from the base of the stem.

+ This explains the Heredityinheritance of such conditions as colour blindness and haemophilia.

+ In mammals, only Old World monkeys, apes and humans have trichromacy, full colour vision.

+ The beginners begin without colour and the different exams of promotion permit them to be promoted to blue, green, red, white and yellow in that order.

+ It has a similar colour to Camilla.

+ The flowers are large and conspicuous, 1–12 cm diameter, with 5–9 petals; colour varies from white to pink and red, and yellow in a few species.

+ To change the colour of whitewash, people used different materials.

+ The first written use of “magenta” as a colour name in English languageEnglish was in 1860.

+ In modern birds, such colour patterning is used in communication and display, either to members of the same species.

+ The distribution and nature of colour vision among the mammals.

+ Frequency-dependent selection happens when, for example, predators learn to take the most common colour variant rather than the less common form.

+ He will continue to dress in the papal colour of white.

+ Although this navy blue colour was used specifically for depicting the Union Flag on maritime flags on the basis of durability, it soon became standard on Union Flags, both on land and at sea.

+ Many colour theorists have said that three “pure” primary colours can mix “all possible colours”.

+ They are usually light in colour and have specific gravities less than 3.

+ There are about 15 other genes which have some effect on eye colour inheritance.

+ It has a vertical bicolour of green and red, with the lesser coat of arms of Portugal centred over the colour boundary.

+ Blue mirrors the sky, black the colour of the soil and national coat, and white the peoples’ happiness and light.

+ Fresh plutonium has a silvery bright colour but takes on a dull grey, yellow or olive green tarnish when exposed to air.

+ She also sometimes uses colour symbolically.

+ Acrylic paint can give a much brighter, more vivid colour than oil paints.
+ The fruit looks like a rough small and yellow grapefruit, and changes colour from green to yellow when it becomes more ripe.

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