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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
tawny
adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
owl
▪ Wardens find him sitting in a fake oak tree beside the replica of a female tawny owl.
▪ Other birds to benefit from the treatment include a tawny owl with an injured leg, now making a fast recovery.
▪ The snowy owl and tawny owl assemblages diverge most greatly from this, with fewer complete mandibles than maxillae.
▪ And it's only the tawny owl who goes tu-whit-tu-whoo.
▪ Staring at me through the branches of a twisted thorn was a tawny owl perched on a rock ledge.
▪ Breeding numbers of the tawny owl were at their lowest since surveying began in 1963.
▪ No more tawny owls in the tall Scotch pines.
▪ Around 50,000 pairs of tawny owls remain in Britain, compared to just 5,000 barn owls.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ And it's only the tawny owl who goes tu-whit-tu-whoo.
▪ But then I saw her face within her tangle of tawny hair - unmistakably young and female.
▪ Her hair was dyed tawny brown and carefully waved.
▪ It made Fabio think of some huge, tawny animal.
▪ It was another female, but small and insignificant-looking, with tawny wings whose gloss had faded.
▪ She looked like a sleek, tawny cat about to pounce on its prey.
▪ Sweep a brush across the four shades, from lightest sand to tawny terracotta, and dust over your face.
▪ Wardens find him sitting in a fake oak tree beside the replica of a female tawny owl.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
tawny

colorful \colorful\ adj.

  1. 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.

  2. 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]

  3. 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
tawny

"tan-colored," late 14c., from Anglo-French tauné "of or like the brownish-yellow of tanned leather," from Old French tanét "dark brown, tan" (12c., Modern French tanné), past participle of taner "to tan hides," from Medieval Latin tannare (see tan (v.)).Related: Tawniness.

Wiktionary
tawny

a. Of a light brown to brownish orange colour n. A light brown to brownish orange colour

WordNet
tawny

adj. of a light brown to brownish orange color

Wikipedia
Tawny

Tawny may refer to:

  • Tawny (given name), a feminine given name
  • Tawny (color)
  • Tawny port, a strong aged wine
  • Tawny, a 1954 record album by Jackie Gleason
  • Tawny, a townland in Kilcar, County Donegal, Ireland
Tawny (color)

Tawny (also called tenné) is a light brown to brownish- orange color.

Tawny (given name)

Tawny is often used as a feminine given or assumed name; it means the colour tawny, a pale orange-brown, or yellow-brown colour.

Notable people with the name include:

  • Tawny Cypress (born 1976), American actress
  • Tawny Little (born 1956), American television newsreader
  • Tawny Kitaen (born 1961), American actress
  • Tawny Moyer (born 1957), American actress
  • Tawny Peaks (born 1970), big-bust model, stripper and housewife
  • Tawny Roberts (born 1979), American pornographic actress.
  • Tawny Taylor, American romance author

Category:Feminine given names

Usage examples of "tawny".

A lacy bra hugged her taut breasts and glowed a brilliant white against her tawny skin, outlining dark brown nipples and areolas beneath the flimsy material.

Then he slew a cassowary and a flamingo and a grebe and a heron and a bittern and a pair of ducks and a shouting peacock and a dancing crane and a bustard and a lily-trotter and, wiping the sacred sweat from his brow with one ermine-trimmed sleeve, slew a wood pigeon and a cockatoo and a tawny owl and a snowy owl and a magpie and three jackdaws and a crow and a jay and a dove.

Presently he was once more in the saddle, pushing across the tawny, empty desert toward the hills that hid Noche Buena, the village where Pasquale had his headquarters.

Her thinness and her tawny skin could not divert my attention from other still less pleasing features about her.

But his head turned again to Bran, as if by compulsion, back to the pale vulnerable figure standing there holding the sword Eirias, his white hair sleek in the mist and the tawny eyes creased a little against the light.

Less than ten yards from where I stood, a wide, flat spur of tawny rock extended out from the Mogado side of the bank some twenty-five feet over the river, and upon it, slithering atop one another, stacked almost to the height of a man, were dozens of crocs, perhaps more than a hundred.

It was pretty country, even in the downpour, when white mists parted and fir-crowned heights looked out for a moment, or we slid down into a deep glen with mossy boulders, lichen-covered stumps, ferny carpet, and damp, balsamy smell of pyramidal cryptomeria, and a tawny torrent dashing through it in gusts of passion.

This was Karnak, the celebrated Fakir, starting his routine with the basket trick wherein he intended to vanish his tawny assistant Abu and make him reappear.

All stopped about fifty feet from half-a-dozen animals of a large size, with strong horns bent back and flattened towards the point, with a woolly fleece, hidden under long silky hair of a tawny color.

Photodilus seem not to have been investigated, but it has been found to want the tarsal loop, as well as the manubrial process, while its clavicles are not joined in a furcula, nor do they meet the keel, and the posterior margin of the sternum has processes and fissures like the tawny section.

A tall woman named Risalyn, a Girdler from the look of her, the tawny Highlands kind, who collected those spilled things carefully when the girl had gone, and claimed she would return them to the spirit wood from whence the girl had ostensibly stolen them.

Bertha Kircher pressed the point of the spear to the tawny side and drove it deep into the savage heart.

Beyond them and the variegated crowd rose the grey and tawny Rock, green only at its lower rim, and above its long crest the strange fog or breeding cloud brought into being by the levanter, a breeding cloud that dissipated there in the blazing light of the western side.

Her curly brown hair shined with megadoses of vitamin A, the tawny bare arms glowed from adequate lutein consumption, her eyes sparkled with high-concentrate beta-carotene.

One girl had the tawny color of a mulatta, the other the glistening ebony of a pure africana.