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Biyografiler | Makaleler | Kategoriler | Yakın Plan | Ara.Biyografi.info | Bugün: 01 Aralık 2008
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Colour
Türkçe Anlamı:
   
  1. renk,colour kızar/etkile/boya.
2. renk. renk duyumu. boya. ten rengi. canlılık. hareketlilik. boyamak. renklendirmek. renk değiştirmek. yüzü kızarmak. etkilemek.
3. renk. renk duyumu. boya. ten rengi. canlilik. hareketlilik. boyamak. renklendirmek. renk degistirmek. yüzü kizarmak. etkilemek. canlılık. renklilik.
   
  İngilizce Anlamı:
 
   
Main Entry: col·our

Pronunciation: k&-l&r

chiefly British variant ofCOLOR
 
  1. See Color.
2. any material used for its color; "she used a different color for the trim". . a race with skin pigmentation different from the white race . . the characteristic of quarks that determines their role in the strong interaction; each flavor of quarks comes in three colors. . interest and variety and intensity; "the Puritan Period was lacking in color". . the timbre of a musical sound; "the recording fails to capture the true color of the original music". . a visual attribute of things that results from the light they emit or transmit or reflect; "a white color is made up of many different wavelengths of light". . an outward or token appearance or form that is deliberately misleading; "he hoped his claims would have a semblance of authenticity"; "he tried to give his falsehood the gloss of moral sanction"; "the situation soon took on a different color". . the appearance of objects described in terms of a person's perception of their hue and lightness and saturation. . modify or bias; "His political ideas color his lectures". . decorate with colors; "color the walls with paint in warm tones". . gloss or excuse; "color a lie". . affect as in thought or feeling; "My personal feelings color my judgment in this case"; "The sadness tinged his life". . add color to; "The child colored the drawings"; "Fall colored the trees"; "colorize black and white film". . change color, often in an undesired manner; "The shirts discolored". . having or capable of producing colors; "color film"; "he rented a color television"; "marvelous color illustrations".
3. The plural "colours" is often used, even for a single flag, because the name derives from the colours composing the FIELD of the flag There are three meanings for colours representing increasing specialization It is a general term describing any flag which is flown to denote nationality When used in reference to ships, it refers to the collectively to the ship's ENSIGN, JACK and FLAG or PENNANT When used in reference to a military unit, it is the unique pair of consecrated flags carried by the unit These constitute the Regimental Colour which represents the unit itself, and the Queen's Colour which represents the higher allegiance .
4. Soil colour of the B horizon can be indicated to a varying degree using the terms Rhodic, Rubic, Chromic and Xanthic Preferably these terms should be limited to soils having an argic or ferralic horizon, or applied in Cambisols and Arenosols In Vertisols the term Pellic is used to indicate dark coloured soils .
5. The perception of the human eye to the visible spectrum of light radiation White light contains radiation at all wavelengths of the visible spectrum Particular colours or hues occur when the reflected radiation contains only wavelengths from a limited part of the spectrum .
6. All colours shown on this web site and any presentation material can only be generally representative of the actual colours Only physical samples can offer a virtually exact colour match No dyed fabrics can ever be identical between different batches .
7. The colour of the suit in question Clubs and Spades are black Diamonds and Hearts are red Black is the opposite of red and vice versa . . To colour up, to turn red in the face; to blush .
8. An element of art and design that pertains to a particular hue One or any mixture of pigments seen when light is reflected off a surface .
9. Colour depends on light because it is made of light there must be light for us to see colour A red shirt will not look red in the dark, where there is no light the whiter the light,, the more true the colors will be A yellow light on a full colour painting will change the appearance of all the colours . . as calculated from Wien's law or from the colour index.
10. Property of quarks associated with their binding with gluons .
11. Colours, whether described in words or shown in images, often have symbolic significance that contributes to meaning See Exploring Language, page 189.
12. It is important to note that every faculty/operating unit has its own designated colours that must be used Please refer to the Corporate Style Guide for Printed Publications .
13. Used to replace the word "Flavour" when describing various foods "What colour ice cream* you want grape?" *see: Ice Cream.
14. Sets the colour for the geological code. . is a small piece of precious opal .
15. Light waves that reach the viewer's eye by transmission or by reflection All substances, whether transparent or opaque, absorb some wavelengths while letting others pass through or bounce off A red apple looks red because it absorbs all colours in white light except red, which it reflects White objects reflect all and black objects absorb all light waves .
16. Property carried by quarks andgluons which determines their strong interactions in a way analogous to that in which electric charge determines electromagnetic interactions Leptons carry no colour, and so do not experience the strong force . . n [{US=color}] warna.
17. Some chatting rooms give the option of typing your messages in different colours One assumes this is meant to make the place look more attractive, but there's a sneaking suspicion that it's really to start up an argument as to whether "colour" should have a U in it or not .
18. Produced when light strikes an object and then reflects back to your eyes .
19. The interaction between the way our eyes work and the way light falls on objects creates the phenomenon of colour We are capable of distinguishing between 10 million nuances of colour, although there are only 11 basic colour terms in the English language - black, white, red, orange, yellow, green, blue, purple, pink, brown and grey Since the 17th century, scientists and artists alike have recognised that colour is important in designing and selling products . . .


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