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  1. May 22, 2024 · The linguistic ancestor to today’s word “orange” was actually first used to describe the tree that the fruit grows on. The word’s roots can be traced all the way back to Sanskrit.

  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. 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. Feb 18, 2016 · Orange actually comes from the Old French word for the citrus fruit - 'pomme d'orenge' - according to the Collins dictionary. Different types of the colour orange from the...

    • Matt Payton
  5. The vivid hue of orange fruits like citrons, mandarins, and mellow oranges inspired its eventual use as a color term starting in the mid-1500s. So while both the orange fruit and color are now ubiquitous, historical linguistics and etymology make clear that the brilliant orange fruit came first.

  6. Jul 27, 2018 · When the first Europeans saw the fruit they were incapable of exclaiming about its brilliant orange color. They recognized the color but didn’t yet know its name. Often they referred to oranges as “golden apples.”

  7. Feb 3, 2023 · In Western art, orange came into common usage after 1809, when the first synthetic orange pigment—chrome orange—was produced. It was especially favored by Pre-Raphaelite painters and Impressionists, who made great use of the color in order to capture the effects of natural light.

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