Recent Articles



































Green



         


This article is about the color green, for other uses, see Green (disambiguation).

#00ff00

Green is a colour seen commonly in nature. Plants are green because they contain chlorophyll.

Green light has a wavelength of around 550 nm and is one of the additive primary colours, the complement of magenta. Many artists, however, continue to use a traditional colour theory in which the complement of green is considered to be red.

[Top]

Distinguishing "Green" in language

The English language makes a distinction between blue and green, but some languages, such as Vietnamese or Tarahumara usually do not use separate words for green and refer to that colour using either a word that also can also refer to yellow or to blue.

It is sometimes argued that Japanese does not distinguish between blue and green either, but Japanese certainly has a word for green (midori みどり, 緑) as opposed to blue (ao あお, 青), and everybody uses both words to refer to green and blue objects respectively. It is true that Japanese did not make such a distinction commonly in the past, and some specific "green" things are still referred to as "ao". In modern life, the most common of them is that a green traffic light is referred as "ao". But the colour of a green sweater, the colour of trees, etc. will not be referred to as "ao", but as "midori" nowadays.

Welsh has different boundaries to English regarding blue and green. The word glas is usually translated as 'blue'. It can also refer, variously, to the colour of the sea, of grass, or of silver. The word gwyrdd is the standard translation for 'green'.

The Chinese language has the blue-green distinction; however, another word which predates the modern vernacular, qing (青 in pinyin: qing1) is used. It can refer to either blue or green, or even (though much less frequently) to black, as in xuanqing (玄青 xuan2 qing1).

In Kurdish language the word "şîn" (pronounced sheen), meaning "blue", is used for green things in nature like leaves, grass and eyes. However, there is another word, "kesk", which is used for other green things, for instance in the Kurdish flag.

[Top]

"Green" as a political ideology

The ecology movement uses green because of its common occurrence in nature. Greenpeace, an ecological group, uses green because of its association with life. Those who carry this into the political realm are called "Greens":

There are political parties known as "Green Parties" in over one hundred countries throughout the world (beginning in Europe, although the Green Party of the United States, many state parties and two prominent provincial parties in Canada - in Ontario and BC have taken root). The more generic term "green party" is used for parties that emphasize environmentalism, but it is increasingly out of favor as the Global Greens have succeeded in uniting almost all such parties under a Global Green Charter.

A "Green Party" (or Faction) also existed in the Byzantine Empire for a while, but of course it had nothing to do with modern Greens. Rather, it developed out of a kind of chariot racing fanclub whose drivers used the colour green to distinguish themselves from the opposing "Blue Party".

Green is the traditional colour of Islam, likewise because of its association with nature. Muhammad is reliably quoted in a hadith as saying that "water, greenery, and a beautiful face" were three universally good things.

For this reason, the flag of Libya is plain green, the only current national flag of a single colour.

Green is the colour of the back of U.S. currency, and thus carries a strong connotation to money, wealth, and capitalism. This is especially true in the U.S., but the status of the dollar worldwide makes it wider symbol. This is illustrated by a joke told in the days of the Soviet Union: "Name something green, other than money", with the correct answer being "A ruble".

In North American stock markets, green is used to denote a rise in stock prices. In East Asian stock markets, however, green is used to denote a drop in stock prices.

Green is also the colour of supporters of Taiwan independence in opposition to the unification-leaning pan-blue coalition. The origin of this symbolism comes from Taiwan being a tropical island and is unrelated to environmentalism or the Green Party.

[Top]

"Green" as a symbol

Green also symbolizes go because of its use in traffic signals. It is also the colour of informational and directional signs.

Because of its camouflage properties, green is typically used for the field uniforms for many military services. It is also used as the dress uniform for many land armies and marines.

"Little Green Men" refers to the stereotypical portrayal of extraterrestrials with green skin, antennae and a generally human body plan (but with the number of a certain body part often changed).

Stephen King wrote a book called The Green Mile, referring to the last walk made by prisoners on death row.

Pink Floyd recorded a song called Green Is The Colour.

[Top]

Colloquial expressions


[Top]

colour Coordinates

Hex triplet = #00FF00 RGB (r, g, b) = (0, 255, 0) CMYK (c, m, y, k) = (255, 0, 255, 0) HSV (h, s, v) = (120, 100, 100)



Colors | List of colors

White Silver Gray Black
Red Orange Yellow Green Blue Indigo Violet
Pink Chartreuse Teal Cyan Azure Magenta
Aquamarine Beige Bistre Brown Cardinal Carmine Coral Crimson Emerald Gold Lavender Maroon Mauve
Navy blue Ochre Olive Peach Powder blue Purple Salmon Tan

[ ]


People who are red-green colour blind can often distinguish between the two colours but confuse them with other colours, e.g., bright green with yellow; dark green with brown.







  View Live Article   This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License