Finally Here!! Which “Orange” Came First, the Color or the Fruit?
Orange you glad we solved this mystery?
What came first, the orange or…orange? Did someone
just make the un-creative decision to name the citrus fruit after its color?
(That’s how the blueberry got its name, after all.) Or did the color get its
name because of the fruit? In terms of perplexing origin stories, this one is
right up there with the chicken vs. the egg. Luckily, though, this one is much
more easily solved!
So which came first, the color or the fruit? The
answer is neither. Well, one did come before the other, but neither was
actually the first meaning of the word. The linguistic ancestor to today’s word
“orange” was actually first used to describe the tree that the fruit grows on.
The word’s roots can be traced all the way back to Sanskrit.
In that language, the word nāranga meant an “orange tree.” Nāranga evolved into the Persian word nārang and the Arabic word nāranj. If you know Spanish, these old words might look very familiar with the modern Spanish word for “orange” is “naranja.” (You won’t believe that this common word is one of the world’s hardest to translate.)
In that language, the word nāranga meant an “orange tree.” Nāranga evolved into the Persian word nārang and the Arabic word nāranj. If you know Spanish, these old words might look very familiar with the modern Spanish word for “orange” is “naranja.” (You won’t believe that this common word is one of the world’s hardest to translate.)
As the word evolved, it eventually came to mean the
fruit, not just the orange tree. Old French adapted the Arabic word nāranj as
“pomme d’orenge” (“the fruit from the orange tree”) or just “orenge.” Speakers
of Middle English adopted the phrase the Middle English equivalent “pume
orange” dates back to the 13th century AD.
The word didn’t come to describe a color until almost
200 years later, making the fruit the clear winner. In 1512, a description of
the color using the word “orange” appeared in a rather strange place. According
to the Oxford English Dictionary, the use of the word first appeared in…a will.
Don’t want to throw out your orange peels? These uses for the fruit rind are
surprising.
So, the only mystery that remains is, how did people
describe the color before 1512? According to the Huffington Post, speakers of Old
English used the word geolurēad, meaning “yellow-red.” But thanks to an Old The French word, the color orange has a name all its own. And a unique name, at
that ”orange”, doesn’t rhyme with any other word in English.
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