Crossword clues for maroon
maroon
- Dark purplish-red
- Reddish-brown hue
- Lonely color?
- Get rid of in a way
- Dark crimson
- Color from the French for "chestnut"
- Abandon ashore
- Strand on the sea
- Strand on a desert island
- Leave on an island
- It's similar to cranberry
- Fordham University color
- Color in Qatar's flag
- Color for many a '70s car or suit
- Color for Chicago or Colgate
- Claret's color
- Abandon on an isle
- Abandon on an island
- Abandon by putting ashore
- Abandon — colour
- ___ 5 ("Payphone" band)
- ___ 5 ("Moves Like Jagger" band)
- Strand on an island
- Brick color
- An exploding firework used as a warning signal
- Desert, as in a desert
- Leave high and dry
- Dark red
- Colgate's color
- Isolate
- Shade of red
- Arab coming in to show buttocks with abandon
- Leave stranded with little hope of rescue
- Desert shade
- Dark red jumper chap’s carrying
- Dark brownish-red
- Abandon - colour
- Shade of brown
- Red shade
- Purplish red
- Leave stranded
- Crayola color
- Color similar to cranberry
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Marron \Mar*ron"\, n. [See Maroon, a.]
A large chestnut. [Obs.]
--Holland.A chestnut color; maroon.
(Pyrotechny & Mil.) A paper or pasteboard box or shell, wound about with strong twine, filled with an explosive, and ignited with a fuse, -- used to make a noise like a cannon. [Written also maroon.]
colorful \colorful\ adj.
-
having striking color. Opposite of colorless.
Note: [Narrower terms: changeable, chatoyant, iridescent, shot; deep, rich; flaming; fluorescent, glowing; prismatic; psychedelic; red, ruddy, flushed, empurpled]
Syn: colourful.
striking in variety and interest. Opposite of colorless or dull. [Narrower terms: brave, fine, gay, glorious; flamboyant, resplendent, unrestrained; flashy, gaudy, jazzy, showy, snazzy, sporty; picturesque]
-
having color or a certain color; not black, white or grey; as, colored crepe paper. Opposite of colorless and monochrome.
Note: [Narrower terms: tinted; touched, tinged; amber, brownish-yellow, yellow-brown; amethyst; auburn, reddish-brown; aureate, gilded, gilt, gold, golden; azure, cerulean, sky-blue, bright blue; bicolor, bicolour, bicolored, bicoloured, bichrome; blue, bluish, light-blue, dark-blue; blushful, blush-colored, rosy; bottle-green; bronze, bronzy; brown, brownish, dark-brown; buff; canary, canary-yellow; caramel, caramel brown; carnation; chartreuse; chestnut; dun; earth-colored, earthlike; fuscous; green, greenish, light-green, dark-green; jade, jade-green; khaki; lavender, lilac; mauve; moss green, mosstone; motley, multicolor, culticolour, multicolored, multicoloured, painted, particolored, particoloured, piebald, pied, varicolored, varicoloured; mousy, mouse-colored; ocher, ochre; olive-brown; olive-drab; olive; orange, orangish; peacock-blue; pink, pinkish; purple, violet, purplish; red, blood-red, carmine, cerise, cherry, cherry-red, crimson, ruby, ruby-red, scarlet; red, reddish; rose, roseate; rose-red; rust, rusty, rust-colored; snuff, snuff-brown, snuff-color, snuff-colour, snuff-colored, snuff-coloured, mummy-brown, chukker-brown; sorrel, brownish-orange; stone, stone-gray; straw-color, straw-colored, straw-coloured; tan; tangerine; tawny; ultramarine; umber; vermilion, vermillion, cinibar, Chinese-red; yellow, yellowish; yellow-green; avocado; bay; beige; blae bluish-black or gray-blue); coral; creamy; cress green, cresson, watercress; hazel; honey, honey-colored; hued(postnominal); magenta; maroon; pea-green; russet; sage, sage-green; sea-green] [Also See: chromatic, colored, dark, light.]
Syn: colored, coloured, in color(predicate).
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
"very dark reddish-brown color," 1791, from French couleur marron, the color of a marron "chestnut," the large sweet chestnut of southern Europe (maroon in that sense was used in English from 1590s), from dialect of Lyons, ultimately from a word in a pre-Roman language, perhaps Ligurian; or from Greek maraon "sweet chestnut."
"put ashore on a desolate island or coast," 1724 (implied in marooning), earlier "to be lost in the wild" (1690s); from maron (n.) "fugitive black slave in the jungles of W.Indies and Dutch Guyana" (1660s), earlier symeron (1620s), from French marron, said to be a corruption of Spanish cimmaron "wild, untamed," from Old Spanish cimarra "thicket," probably from cima "summit, top" (from Latin cyma "sprout"), with a notion of living wild in the mountains. Related: Marooned.
Wiktionary
Etymology 1
Associated with Maroon culture, communities or peoples. n. 1 An escaped negro slave of the Caribbean and the Americas or a descendant of escaped slaves. 2 A castaway; a person who has been marooned. v
-
To abandon in a remote, desolate place, as on a deserted island. Etymology 2
a. Of a '''maroon''' color n. A dark red, somewhat brownish, color. Etymology 3
n. (context nautical English) A rocket fired to summon the crew of a lifeboat. Etymology 4
n. (context slang derogatory English) An idiot; a fool.
WordNet
adj. dark brownish to purplish red [syn: brownish-red]
n. a person who is stranded (as on an island); "when the tide came in I was a maroon out there"
a dark purplish red to dark brownish red
an exploding firework used as a warning signal
v. leave stranded or isolated withe little hope og rescue; "the travellers were marooned" [syn: strand]
leave stranded on a desert island without resources; "The mutinous sailors were marooned on an island"
Wikipedia
Maroon is a dark shade of red. Maroon, marooning, or marooned also may refer to:
Maroon is the fifth full-length studio album by Barenaked Ladies. The album was the follow-up to 1998's Stunt, which was the band's most successful album in the United States. Maroon debuted at #1 in Canada (their second to reach #1 after 1992's Gordon) and #5 on the U.S. Billboard 200. In its first week, the album sold 17,800 copies in Canada and just under 128,000 in the United States. It has sold at least 1 million copies in the U.S. alone. With keyboardist Kevin Hearn's leukemia battle won, and with an instinct to play down the jokey reputation they were so known for, BNL deliberately created a more serious and sophisticated album. The album spawned three successful singles which still receive moderate airplay: " Pinch Me", " Too Little Too Late" and " Falling for the First Time".
Unlike past albums, the songs came almost entirely from the pairing of Page/ Robertson. One track, "Baby Seat", was written by Page with his longtime song-writing partner, Stephen Duffy. This was the last Page/Duffy track that Barenaked Ladies would release, starting a policy of keeping the writing within the band on their next album. "Hidden Sun", written while Hearn was in the hospital, appears as a hidden track on most copies of the album. As with each of their early albums, the band recorded one song, "Humour of the Situation", completely naked.
The band recorded 17 tracks for the album; Tracks recorded for this album but omitted from the finished record include: "Powder Blue" (appears on the US "Pinch Me" single), "Inline Bowline" (appears as an extra track on some international versions, and is on the Australian "Pinch Me" single), "Born Human" (appears on the Australian "Pinch Me" single, re-recorded for Hearn's album Night Light) and "Half a Heart" (re-recorded for the Barenaked Ladies Are Me sessions before the Maroon sessions version was later released on Stop Us If You've Heard This One Before!). "That's All, That's All" was also written for the album, and was later recorded for Page's The Vanity Project.
Maroons (from the Latin American Spanish word cimarrón: "feral animal, fugitive, runaway") were Africans who escaped from slavery in the Americas and formed independent settlements. The term can also be applied to their descendants.
Maroon ( US & UK , Australia ) is a dark brownish red color which takes its name from the French word marron, or chestnut.
The Oxford English Dictionary describes it as "a brownish crimson or claret color."
In the RGB model used to create colors on computer screens and televisions, maroon is created by turning down the brightness of pure red to about one half.
A maroon is a type of rocket which makes a loud banging report (noise) and creates a bright flash. It is used as an alarm or warning. The British Royal National Lifeboat Institution uses these rockets to call the crew when the lifeboat needs to be launched. Another example was as a signal on a railway, to alert oncoming trains that they must stop due to unexpected accident or track work ahead. Used by British spotters in WWI located around the cities. They would fire when German bombers were approaching.
Maroon was a German metalcore band based in Nordhausen. They were formed in 1998.
Maroon is a CD album by Muslimgauze. The first edition of 1000 copies was issued in a light brown digipak with a postcard insert, the first 500 copies of which were sealed with a Palestinian Authority stamp. The album was later re-issued in December 2002 with different artwork, in a digipak with a clear tray. The album was "[d]edicated to people forced into direct action due to vile regimes."
Maroon is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
- Anthony Maroon, Australian radio presenter
- Darren Maroon (born 1966), Australian rugby league player
- Fred J. Maroon (1924–2001), American photographer
Usage examples of "maroon".
A rusting maroon pickup, loaded with boxes, bundles, and assorted junk, stood behind, preventing the Jeep from backing up.
Soon Katharine and Margery, perched on their chairs, would be marooned on islands.
The duchess wore a dark maroon undergown and a sheer black silk overgown, her jewelry equally modest.
He managed to get the whole soggy mess into the pulper without dribbling more than a few drops on his paper strewn desk or on his maroon jacket.
Vanadin, square-jawed John Emmet of the Federal Bureau of Loyalty, several TV and handie stars, Sacheverell, about eight versions of Mary herself, Jack Jones in black tights, Juno in maroon ones, Dr.
Cerryl turned and studied the largest bedchamber from the small upper hall landing-four-poster bed, with solid dark wood posts at each corner, a silk-covered chair in one corner, two matching wardrobes with a full-length wall mirror between them, two windows, each shuttered and framed with maroon silks, and a door to a bathing chamber.
Two or three male guards in maroon uniforms stood among the women gesturing them forward.
Half of them stood somewhat apart from a dozen in maroon, backed up against the side of a cubicle, truncheons held threateningly aloft.
Skye terrier, her suppositious wealth, her lapses of responsiveness and incipient catarrhal deafness: the younger, her lamp of colza oil before the statue of the Immaculate Conception, her green and maroon brushes for Charles Stewart Parnell and for Michael Davitt, her tissue papers.
She therefore did not object to the unrequested ascension, until a second massive tentacle folded itself gently but firmly around her midsection, collapsing her speaking tube against the slick maroon flesh of her torso.
Faced with the prospect of being marooned for weeks while repairs were made, Adams inquired about proceeding overland.
Keeper 347 has been marooned on a desert island in the middle of Battersea Park while rescuing a dog.
As Clio moved forward, she saw that the committee sat at a lone table anchoring down a maroon Persian carpet of faded splendor.
The dark maroon carpet complemented the walnut wainscot and the stark white walls.
Juan Cordova was tall, I noted, as he sat down, retying the sash of the maroon silk robe which hung loosely upon his spare frame.