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Colouring   Listen
Colouring

noun
1.
A digestible substance used to give color to food.  Synonyms: coloring, food color, food coloring, food colour, food colouring.
2.
A visual attribute of things that results from the light they emit or transmit or reflect.  Synonyms: color, coloring, colour.
3.
The act or process of changing the color of something.  Synonym: coloring.



Colour

verb
1.
Modify or bias.  Synonym: color.
2.
Decorate with colors.  Synonyms: color, emblazon.
3.
Give a deceptive explanation or excuse for.  Synonyms: color, gloss.
4.
Affect as in thought or feeling.  Synonyms: color, distort, tinge.  "The sadness tinged his life"
5.
Add color to.  Synonyms: color, color in, colorise, colorize, colour in, colourise, colourize.  "Fall colored the trees" , "Colorize black and white film"
6.
Change color, often in an undesired manner.  Synonyms: color, discolor, discolour.



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"Colouring" Quotes from Famous Books



... colouring shed round it by sentiment and romance, banditisme, in its latter days at least, has been a very common-place affair. Great numbers of the Corsicans, too indolent to work, were happy to lead a vagabond life, harbouring in the ...
— Rambles in the Islands of Corsica and Sardinia - with Notices of their History, Antiquities, and Present Condition. • Thomas Forester

... player, all the delicacy of taste, and all the dignity of expression that we reverence in the painter: his figures, where the subject gives him scope, are noble almost beyond imagination, his attitudes the most strictly appropriated to the sensations that inspire them, and his colouring, to borrow a metaphor from the sister art to express an excellence for which the other has yet no word of its own, is the greatest that we ever did or ever must expect to see. With all the sweetness and delicacy of his imagery, there is a glow ...
— The Mirror of Taste, and Dramatic Censor, Vol. I, No. 5, May 1810 • Various

... was setting like a vision of love, colouring with softness and with quiet the manifold life of the city. James looked at it, his heart swelling with sadness; for with it seemed to die his short joy, and the shadows lengthening were like the sad facts of reality which crept into his soul one by ...
— The Hero • William Somerset Maugham

... a needle and thread (the latter covered with lamp-black and oil) under the epidermis, according to a pattern previously marked out upon the skin. Several stitches being thus taken at once, the thumb is pressed upon the part while the thread is drawn through, by which means the colouring matter is retained, and a permanent dye of a blue tinge imparted to the skin. A woman expert at this business will perform it very quickly and with great regularity, but seldom without drawing blood in many places, and occasioning some inflammation. Where so large a portion of ...
— Journal of the Third Voyage for the Discovery of a North-West Passage • William Edward Parry

... be warranted in stating that the late Tzar had been frequently accused of cowardice—an indictment to which, it must be admitted, many undeniable facts lent a strong colouring of probability; and he further tells of "the Emperor's aversion to ride on horseback, and of his dread of a horse even when the animal was harnessed to a vehicle." There is something, however, of inconsistency in his observation that ...
— Camps, Quarters, and Casual Places • Archibald Forbes


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