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  2. Color in Chinese culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_in_Chinese_culture

    The clear blue sky and fresh green vegetables were considered shades of a single color which could even include black as its darkest hue in some contexts. Modern Standard Mandarin does make the blue-green distinction using lǜ (绿; 綠 'leafy') for green and lán (蓝; 藍 'indigo') for blue. Qīng was associated with health, prosperity, and ...

  3. Color symbolism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_symbolism

    Green Green is a primary color in many models of color space, and a secondary in all others. It is most often used to represent nature , healing , health , youth , or fertility , since it is such a dominant color in nature.

  4. Green - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green

    The green represents hope ("esperanto" means "one who hopes"), the white represents peace and neutrality and the star represents the five inhabited continents. Green is one of the three colors (along with red and black, or red and gold) of Pan-Africanism.

  5. Political colour - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_colour

    In Australia, a dark shade of green is used to represent right wing National Party of Australia, while a light shade of green is used to represent the Australian Greens. In Brazil, in addition to its use by the Green Party, green, as the main colour of the Brazilian flag, is strongly associated with Brazilian nationalism and Brazilian people.

  6. Color of chemicals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_of_chemicals

    Dark yellow (hot), green (cold) green (hot and cold) Cobalt: blue (hot and cold) blue (hot and cold) Copper: green (hot), blue (cold) red, opaque (cold), colorless (hot) Gold: golden (hot), silver (cold) red (hot and cold) Iron: yellow or brownish red (hot and cold) green (hot and cold) Lead: colorless, yellow or brownish (hot) gray and opaque ...

  7. Forest green - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forest_green

    Forest green may be used to represent the Green movement, especially in graphic design for environmental literature regarding issues having to do with forest conservation. A forest green environmentalist (also called a dark green environmentalist) is an environmentalist who is seriously committed to environmentalism. School colors

  8. Pan-Arab colors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pan-Arab_colors

    The black represents the Black Standard used by the Rashidun and Abbasid Caliphates, while white was the dynastic color of the Umayyad Caliphate. Green is a color associated with the primary religion of Islam – and therefore also a color representative of the caliphates.

  9. Flag of Pakistan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flag_of_Pakistan

    Though the specific shade of green on the flag is mandated only as 'dark green', its official and most consistent representation is in Pakistan green, which is shaded distinctively darker.

  10. RGB color model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RGB_color_model

    Hexadecimal 8-bit RGB representations of the main 125 colors. A color in the RGB color model is described by indicating how much of each of the red, green, and blue is included. The color is expressed as an RGB triplet ( r, g, b ), each component of which can vary from zero to a defined maximum value.

  11. Bright green environmentalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bright_green_environmentalism

    The dark green brand of environmentalism is associated with ideas of ecocentrism, deep ecology, degrowth, anti-consumerism, post-materialism, holism, the Gaia hypothesis of James Lovelock, and sometimes a support for a reduction in human numbers and/or a relinquishment of technology to reduce humanity's effect on the biosphere .