Orange vs Grange - What's the difference?
orange | grange |
An evergreen tree of the genus Citrus'' such as ''Citrus sinensis .
The fruit of an orange tree; a citrus fruit with a slightly sour flavour.
The colour of a ripe fruit of an orange tree, midway between red and yellow.
Orange juice, or orange coloured and flavoured cordial.
Having the colour of the fruit of an orange tree; yellowred; reddish-yellow.
To color orange.
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To become orange.
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(British) A farm, especially that of a gentleman farmer.
* ~1603 , William Shakespeare, ''Othello, Act I, scene I, line 120:
Outlying land belonging to a monastery.
(archaic) A granary.
As a verb orange
is .As an adjective orange
is orangey.As a proper noun grange is
(us) (usually, with "the") national grange of the patrons of husbandry, an association of farmers.orange
English
(wikipedia orange)Usage notes
* It is commonly believed that “orange” has no rhymes. While there are no commonly used English dictionary words that rhyme exactly with “orange” (“door-hinge” comes close in US pronunciation), the English surname Gorringe is a rhyme, at least in UK pronunciation. SeeNoun
Derived terms
Adjective
(en-adj)Antonyms
* (having orange as its colour) nonorangeVerb
(orang)See also
* citrus * clementine * Cointreau * * mandarin * marmalade * murcott * naartjie * ortanique * pomander * satsuma * satsuma mandarin * satsuma tangerine * secondary colour * tangerine * triple sec * zest *Anagrams
* 1000 English basic words ----grange
English
(wikipedia grange)Noun
(en noun)- What tell'st thou me of robbing? / This is Venice. My house is not a grange .