Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. Dec 30, 2023 · The first time the word “orange” was documented in the English language was around the late 14 th century CE, when it was used to refer to the fruit, according to the Online Etymology...

    • Tom Hale
  3. Jul 24, 2022 · The Sanskrit word reached European languages through Persian نارنگ (nārang) and its Arabic derivative نارنج (nāranj). 'Orange' entered Late Middle English in the 14th century via the Old French word orenge (as in the phrase pomme d'orenge), which is itself based on the Arabic nāranj.

  4. Jul 27, 2018 · Almost imperceptibly (though of course it was entirely a function of perception), orange did become the recognized word for a recognizable color, and by the late 1660s and 1670s, the optical experiments of Isaac Newton firmly fixed it as one of the seven colors of the spectrum.

  5. Mar 1, 2018 · By the 1300s, the word “orange” and its variants had spread across Europe, and denoted the name for the brightly-colored fruit. The name for the color came later, though.

  6. Feb 21, 2023 · By the 1400s, the word orange —for the fruit—had finally made its way into the English lexicon. It took another century or so for English speakers to co-opt it to describe the reddish-yellow...

  7. Mar 7, 2018 · The word became naranja in Spanish and arancia in Italian, losing the initial ‘n’ in both it’s English and French incarnations. The wordorange’ had infiltrated many European languages by the 1300s, and had begun to be used to refer to the fruit.

  8. Mar 9, 2018 · It’s thought that the orange fruit originally came from China – the German word Apfelsine and the Dutch sinaasappel (Chinese apple) reflect this. Historians believe the fruit made its way to Europe either by Italian traders or Portuguese navigators around 1500.

  1. People also search for