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Color:
Lemon


More info:
Wikipedia, ColorHexa


Colors with the same hue:
Meteor Gray
Old moss green
Vomit Yellow
Titanium
Peridot
Sulfur
Titanium yellow
Dark khaki
Xanthic
Misty Moss
Gentle Sage
Aureolin
Yellow rose
Cadmium yellow
Neon yellow
Yellow Sunshine
Sunny Yellow
Sallow Yellow
Straw
Sallow
Nearby colors:
Canary yellow
Yellow 
Yellow
Lemon glacier
Dazzling Yellow
Daffodil
Middle yellow
Electric Yellow
Yellow 
Watermelon Yellow
Sunshine Yellow
Maximum yellow
Words evoked by this color:
lemon,  leman,  lemma,  yancey,  lavour,  yellow,  shandy,  flavin,  lumis,  annoyance,  lenny,  citric,  citrus,  citrate,  squeeze,  squeezed,  zest,  lem,  pucker,  lum,  blare,  blinding,  cadiz,  jaunty,  disposition,  titi,  whin,  cornmeal,  goldenrod,  acacia,  nourishment,  loquat,  pone,  cheddar,  gouda,  avens,  braunschweig,  burma,  vincent,  noonday,  rays,  corona,  surya,  son,  solar,  cob,  noon,  ghee,  dal,  prakash
Literary analysis:
In literary descriptions the word “lemon” is often employed as an evocative color term that conveys both brightness and a subtle sense of decay or change. For instance, in one passage the “lemon-yellow” of a stem immediately draws the reader’s eye to its vibrant hue, highlighting nature’s delicate contrasts ([1]). This vivid color is further celebrated in a straightforward declaration, “Lemon Yellow,” which functions almost as a palette choice for high-light points in a composition ([2], [3]). Conversely, the adjective in “lemon-faced corpses” uses the color to suggest a ghostly pallor amid the harsh realities of war ([4]), while another narrative describes a fading “lemon-yellow” that underscores a gradual loss of intensity and life ([5]). Together, these examples demonstrate how “lemon” as a color enriches visual imagery and mood in literature.
  1. Stem solid, enlarged at the top, lemon-yellow .
    — from Toadstools, mushrooms, fungi, edible and poisonous; one thousand American fungi How to select and cook the edible; how to distinguish and avoid the poisonous, with full botanic descriptions. Toadstool poisons and their treatment, instructions to students, recipes for cooking, etc., etc. by Charles McIlvaine
  2. Lemon Yellow.
    — from Popular Pastimes for Field and Fireside, or Amusements for young and old by Caroline L. Smith
  3. Lemon yellow is chiefly adapted to points of high light, and has a peculiarly happy effect when glazed over greens in both modes of painting.
    — from Field's Chromatography or Treatise on Colours and Pigments as Used by Artists by George Field
  4. In and out of the ditch-like trenches lay the Spanish dead, lemon-faced corpses dressed in shabby blue and white ticking.
    — from Wounds in the rain: War stories by Stephen Crane
  5. Of course Wapoota did not understand the words but he fully appreciated the action, and the lemon-yellow began to fade while the brown-ochre returned.
    — from The Madman and the Pirate by R. M. (Robert Michael) Ballantyne


Colors associated with the word:
Lemon
Yellow 
Citrus
Pale Yellow
Lemon chiffon
Sunny Yellow
Daffodil
Buttercup
Canary
Sunflower
Gold 
Amber 
Mustard
Chartreuse
Words with similar colors:
leman,  lemma,  coward,  canary,  cowardly,  serin,  cowardice,  yappy,  brightening,  jaundice,  chick,  quince,  daffodil,  buttercup,  gorse,  smiley,  grinning,  aquino,  yolanda,  banana


This tab, the new OneLook "color thesaurus", is a work in progress. It draws from a data set of more than 2000 color names gathered from sources around the Web, and an analysis of how they are referenced in English texts. Some words, like "peach", function as both a color name and an object; when you do a search for words like these, you will see both of the above sections.



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