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  1. May 22, 2024 · The answer is…neither. Well, one did come before the other, but neither was actually the first meaning of the word. The linguistic ancestor to today’s word “orange” was actually first used ...

  2. Dec 30, 2023 · Perhaps surprisingly, the fruit came first. 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 ...

    • Tom Hale
  3. 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 ...

  4. Mar 1, 2018 · It’s all the more interesting, given that oranges’ exteriors are often naturally green. The bright color we associate with the fruit occurs only if temperatures drop while the orange is on the ...

  5. Feb 18, 2016 · Given the exoticism of the orange fruit, you could be forgiven that the colour came first as it naturally occurs independent of the fruit such as in sunsets or leaves in autumn. Orange actually ...

  6. Initially, the English word orange simply referred to the fruit. By the early 15th century, the word was adopted into Middle English as orenge. In medieval England, the color was actually called ġeolurēad for reddish-yellow or ġeolucumeow for yellow-orange. It was not until 1542 that the word orange was first recorded in English as the name ...

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  8. Jul 27, 2018 · Tangerine doesn’t really count. Its name also comes from a fruit, a variety of the orange, but it wasn’t until 1899 that “tangerine” appears in print as the name of a color—and it isn’t clear why we require a new word for it. This seems no less true for persimmon and for pumpkin. There is just orange.

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