Whats color?!


Question: I have seen this around a lot people saying stuff like

"i like a strong color"
"raise your colors"
"OMG! i just love color"

Is it a curry?


Answers: I have seen this around a lot people saying stuff like

"i like a strong color"
"raise your colors"
"OMG! i just love color"

Is it a curry?

No its an american word for Colour!!! lol

er.............. what?

Spell it right and I might know what you mean lol. seriously what gave you Americans the right to go changing the way English words are spelt. Strong colour is darker more definite (not pastel shade). To raise your colours means to let everyone know what side you are on. The last means that whoever said that likes bright vivid colours around them again not wishy washy pastels or whites.

Colour means colour! Like adding lots of colour to food by different ingredients.
Like CREAMY pasta, RED tomato sauce, GREEN basil and PINK tuna steaks. Also, if they say somthing is colourful. They may mean its got lots of different flavours that all work together! This is only right if your talking about food! (duh!)

your missing a U its spelt colour

dunno what the rest means

"raise your colours" refers to flags, either letting the enemy know who's side your on. or in the navy it was (iirc is still used) a method of sending messages ship to ship or ship to shore either by semaphore or raising the flags on the mast

x_the_on... sorry but what right do have to tell us how we can or can not spell our words ?

color is how we was taught in our schools and I'm sure our for fathers decided to change many of the English words so we would have more freedom of choose.

confused!

i dont understand the question...

Just a note on the colour/color British/American spelling thing. It wasn't that Americans deliberately changed the spelling of words with an 'our' ending to 'or', in 18th century both spellings were equally accepted on both sides of the Atlantic. It was only later as the first dictionaries were written that the spellings were standardised, and just chance that the US chose 'or' and Britain chose 'our'.

must be some sort of american thing





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