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- The Color red or the Red color - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
2 Red is a color You don't usually say "red (as an adjective) color"; the use of the red (as a noun) on its own (without color after it) means that you are talking about the color that's red The same rule applies to all colors, such as green, yellow, blue However, the color can be used as an adjective before other nouns
- I hate red color or I hate red: why exactly is the first option . . .
I guess the natural way is to say: I hate red But it's interesting why exactly the combination "red color" is unnatural in English in this context In Russian, a similar phrase would be perfectly okay Is it because color calls for an article, and this would in turn call for the continuation of the sentence: I hate the a red color of
- In red color or red color of. . . Which one is better?
In the first example, I would remove the word 'color' These shirts are popular in red This would be the most common way to say this The second example you gave sounds like it is the specific shade of red that is popular, instead of the red shirt If you want to make sure you are talking about the shirts, do not use ' red color of these shirts'
- Do you like the color red vs Do you like the red color?
3 "I like the colour red" implies you like red in general "I like the red colour" implies that you are liking a specific red colour - that it is an abbreviated phrase, e g of "I like the red colour [in this photograph]"
- article before color - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Do we use definite article before colors? This command gives me all the clickable content in the red color
- Red as noun or adjective - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
It is a noun, the evidence for this is that the word red could be modified by an adjective, and even take an article "My favourite colour is a strong red" (for example) But this is a classic case of "does grammar matter?" The purpose of learning grammar as an English learner is to help you understand and communicate I say that it doesn't matter what part of speech you assign to "red", since the meaning would be exactly the same
- Are colors noun or adjective? [closed] - English Language Learners . . .
Are the colors noun or adjective ? I mean when I say sentence below , Should I use a noun after “red” ? 1)I need red of this shirt 2)I need red one of this shirt
- meaning - a white color the color white - English Language Learners . . .
In this case "if you see something red" would be better Of course "a red colour" does exist, but then "colour" is a synonym for "shade" "Mauve", "russet", "carmine" and "blood-red" are all "red colours" But this is perhaps not the meaning you intended 2 I want the room to be the color white 2a I want the room to be a white color
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