Advertisement
Advertisement
Other Words From
- color·ful·ly adverb
- color·ful·ness noun
- un·color·ful adjective
Example Sentences
The exhibit highlights a decade of CRSELA’s history, with editorial photographs of students through the years, DIY flyers, camp artwork and archival objects representing colorful moments in the kids’ musical journeys.
As the clock ticks closer to the 8 p.m. curtain time, the lobby more clearly resembles a house party — a chatty, mingling crowd, flashing colorful lights and flowing red wine.
He’s become part of the colorful fabric of the event.
Mozejewski’s costume represented the latest chapter in the colorful history of the abandoned plaza that many see as symbol of the city’s neglect and stubborn crime problem.
Unless it’s artistically rendered in a colorful bandanna, that is.
Advertisement
More About Colorful
What does colorful mean?
Colorful literally means full of color, especially a lot of different bright colors.
It can also be used in a figurative way to mean rich with interesting or vividly depicted elements, such as characters or events.
For example, a colorful story is one with a lot of interesting parts, locations, and especially colorful characters—people with unique (or eccentric) personalities and ways of life.
A place like a restaurant or nightclub might be said to have a colorful history, meaning a lot of very interesting or unusual things have happened there.
The phrase colorful language is a euphemism—it’s a polite way of referring to language that contains a lot of curse words, obscenities, or other potentially offensive terms. Colorful is sometimes used in this way in other situations as a euphemistic or humorous way of implying that something is a bit seedy, shady, or outside the mainstream, as in That place is known to have a colorful clientele, if you know what I mean—a lot of shady deals go down there.
Example: The history of the museum is as colorful as the paintings that hang on its walls—it has seen some truly bizarre happenings over the years.
Where does colorful come from?
The first records of the word colorful come from the 1800s. The suffix -ful means “full of” and turns the noun color into the adjective colorful, literally meaning “full of color.”
Colorful is most often used to describe something that includes not just many different colors but especially bright and vibrant ones—like rainbows, leaves in the fall, or a candy store. The figurative sense of colorful also often implies a variety of things, such as in the phrase a colorful cast of characters. If you describe a period in history as colorful, it means it involved a lot of interesting or unusual events. Describing a person as colorful often implies that they’re flamboyant or interesting in a vibrant way. The words vivid and vibrant can be used as synonyms for the literal and figurative sense of colorful.
The word colorless is the opposite of colorful in both senses—it can describe something that literally has no color, or it can describe something that is dull because there’s nothing interesting about it.
Did you know ... ?
What are some other forms related to colorful?
- colorfully (adverb)
- colorfulness (noun)
- uncolorful (adjective)
What are some synonyms for colorful?
What are some words that share a root or word element with colorful?
What are some words that often get used in discussing colorful?
How is colorful used in real life?
Colorful is usually used positively, but it can occasionally be used in a slightly negative way to imply that something might be a bit offensive or seedy.
15 Colorful and Vibrant Street Artworks by Eduardo Kobrahttps://t.co/j3Kp2tpPMM #art pic.twitter.com/gTM3sOifR6
— Art Magazine (@myartmagazine) May 14, 2020
It's a fast moving plot– we got seedy night clubs, madams, root doctors, and all sorts of colorful characters. But alongside that– serious social commentary about race, poverty and patriarchy.
— Tayari Jones (@tayari) May 12, 2020
The great comics throughout history have offended, made people think and question things, etc. They've often done so with blue language, to great success. But there's a difference in using colorful language to make a point, and just flat-out insulting people for no reason.
— "Il Cartographer" Brian Zane (@zmanbrianzane) May 9, 2020
Try using colorful!
Which of the following words would NOT be used to describe something considered colorful?
A. vibrant
B. plain
C. interesting
D. vivid
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse