Saturated vs Technicolor - What's the difference?
saturated | technicolor |
(saturate)
(not comparable) Full; unable to hold or contain any more.
(comparable) Soaked or drenched with moisture.
(not comparable, chemistry, of a solution) Containing all the solute that can normally be dissolved at a given temperature.
(chemistry) Having all available valence bonds filled; especially of any organic compound containing only single bonds between carbon atoms.
A colour process for motion pictures, developed and used in the twentieth century and known for its hyper-realistic, saturated levels of colour.
Using the Technicolor process.
As adjectives the difference between saturated and technicolor
is that saturated is full; unable to hold or contain any more while Technicolor is using the Technicolor process.As a verb saturated
is past tense of saturate.As a noun Technicolor is
a colour process for motion pictures, developed and used in the twentieth century and known for its hyper-realistic, saturated levels of colour.saturated
English
Verb
(head)Adjective
(en adjective)technicolor
English
(wikipedia Technicolor)Noun
(-)Derived terms
* technicolor * Technicolor yawnAdjective
(-)- It was his opinion that 1946's ''Do You Love Me'', a Technicolor musical, would go down much better with 'industrial audiences' than the 'better class' of viewer.
