Englishfor English speakers
color
—
noun
(= colour, coloring, colouring)
a visual attribute of things that results from the light they emit or transmit or reflect
a white color is made up of many different wavelengths of light
—
verb
(= colorize, colour)
add color to
The child colored the drawings
Fall colored the trees
colorize black and white film
—
noun
(= colour, vividness)
interest and variety and intensity
the Puritan Period was lacking in color
the characters were delineated with exceptional vividness
—
adjective
(= colour)
having or capable of producing colors
color film
he rented a color television
marvelous color illustrations
—
noun
(= colour)
the timbre of a musical sound
the recording fails to capture the true color of the original music
—
noun
a race with skin pigmentation different from the white race (especially Blacks)
—
verb
(= tinge, colour)
affect as in thought or feeling
My personal feelings color my judgment in this case
The sadness tinged his life
—
verb
(= colour)
modify or bias
His political ideas color his lectures
—
noun
(= semblance, gloss, colour)
an outward or token appearance or form that is deliberately misleading
he hoped his claims would have a semblance of authenticity
he tried to give his falsehood the gloss of moral sanction
the situation soon took on a different color
—
noun
the appearance of objects (or light sources) described in terms of a person's perception of their hue and lightness (or brightness) and saturation
—
noun
(= colour)
(physics) the characteristic of quarks that determines their role in the strong interaction
each flavor of quarks comes in three colors
—
verb
(= colour)
decorate with colors
color the walls with paint in warm tones
—
verb
(= colour)
give a deceptive explanation or excuse for
color a lie
—
noun
(= colour)
any material used for its color
she used a different color for the trim
—
verb
(= discolor, discolour, colour)
change color, often in an undesired manner
The shirts discolored
control
Noun
—
If you have control over someone or something, you can make it do what you want.
He should try to take control and tell the other handlers what to do.
in the rain, he had lost control on the wet surface and spun off the road.
The country fell under the direct control of the army.
They are trying to keep tighter control over spending.
The government will demand improved pollution control systems for all factories.
Most companies devote some resources to quality control and product testing.
Unless birth control methods are used, sooner or later the woman is likely to get pregnant.
The continuing Soviet desire for arms control led to a SALT II treaty.
The brain's control systems tend to decline with age so that, for instance, our balance gets less good.
The experimental group took the medicine while the control group took a sugar pill.
Suddenly the airplane went out of control and started diving.
—
A control is a button, switch, dial, etc. that lets you make a machine do what you want.
If you turn off your TV with the remote control, it continues to use a quarter of normal power.
She touched the volume control and the sound dropped.
control
Verb
—
If you control something, you make it do what you want.
Too many people are overweight because they can't control their eating behaviour.
The company is controlled by a New York businessman.
—
If you control something, you do not let its numbers or size grow too much.
The new plan should control inflation.
mechanism
Noun
—
A mechanism is the way something works
This research should help us to understand the mechanisms of memory.
This agreement sets out detailed mechanisms for solving disagreement between the two countries.
These two features combine to create a new data retrieval mechanism.
—
A mechanism is one moving system within a larger, more complex machine or organism.
The body has a control mechanism to bring down blood-sugar level when it begins to reach unhealthy peaks.