107 collocations for color

She colored a very little, and said, 'Nothing could be more gratifying to me.'

Mickey and Minnie Mouse coloring book, no.979.

Staining and coloring matters were well known to the ancients at a very early period, witness the lustrous pigments on Etruscan vases more than two thousand years ago; and inks are often mentioned in the Bible.

And Alice looked up from her little stool, where she sat before the fire at Uncle John's feet, with the flush of deep feeling coloring her cheeks and the dewy light of happiness in her eyes.

Then gradually the ante-pituitary gained an ascendency in the concert of her internal secretions, so coloring her life with its masculine tints, and altering her face as well as her disposition.

Counting and coloring fun step by step with Betty and Jack.

I tells them about it just like I would colored folks.

" Instantly the tears came to Maggie's eyes, and, coloring crimson, she said: "I didn't mean to tellindeed I didn't, but I forgot all about your charge.

It was natural that the metaphysics in which he had been immersed should color his thought; but literature affords few if any instances of metaphysics so transformed into poetry in the crucible of feeling as is afforded by stanza V. of this ode.

A rainbow sprang up out of the Rhine, and lay brightly on the mountain side, coloring vineyard and crag, in the most singular beauty, while its second reflection faintly arched like a glory above the high summits.

Third North CarolinaAll colored officers.

exclaimed Mercy, breaking off and coloring scarlet, as she became suddenly aware that her pastor was gazing at her with a scrutinizing look she had never seen on his face before.

How he used to tease her about having by and by to color her hair white and put on spectacles, or else she would have to call her husband "papa."

The water was of the most beautiful green hue, the morning light colored the peaks around with purple, and a misty veil rolled up the rocks of the Traunstein.

God's revelations of himself and his purposes to man have always been through men, and by His laws the medium always colors the light which it transmits.

Then in winter the trees themselves break forth in bloom, myriads of small four-sided staminate cones crowd the ends of the slender sprays, coloring the whole tree, and when ripe dusting the air and the ground with golden pollen.

He changed clothes with her, colored his face like hers, put on her veil and murdered her, so that she might tell no tales.

Norman L. Hill & Harold W. Stoke (A); 30Nov67; R425626. HILL, WYCLIFFE A. Coloring your dialogue.

But it was the recollection of Pickering’s infamous conduct that colored all my doubts of her.

And still, in the summer twilights, When the river seems to run Out from the inner glory, Warm with the melted sun, The weary mill-girl lingers Beside the charmed stream, And the sky and the golden water Shape and color her dream.

And as it took possession of the room, covering everything with its garment of vibration, it slipped in also, so to speak, between the crevices of the sleeping, unprotected Spinrobin, coloring his dreamshis innocent dreamswith the suggestion of nightmare dread.

I don't think I dwelt much on the religious observance of the day, but I dug up some of my profane associations with it in early life, and told them about coloring eggs, and fighting them, and all that; there in New England, in those days, they had never seen or heard of such a thing as an Easter egg.

Katy John said to her one day, in the soft, slurring accent that colored her English.

The condition of rivers, which must be owing to the condition of the weather, has often colored events for ages, perhaps forever.

And having established his case, he opens upon his opponent a discharge of raillery so delicate and good-natured that it is impossible for the latter to maintain his ground against it; or, when the subject is too grave, he colors his exaggerations with all the bitterness of irony and vehemence of passion.

107 collocations for  color