khaki
/ˈkæ.ki/
UK: /ˈkɑː.ki/
KÆ · ki (2 syllables)
English
Noun Top 29,335
Ad
Definition
A dull, yellowish-brown colour, the colour of dust.
Etymology
Borrowed from Hindustani خاکی (xākī) / ख़ाकी (xākī), from Classical Persian خَاکِی (xākī, “dusty, earthy, earth-colored”). Noun sense 5 was coined in reference to the colour of the uniform of British troops during the Second Boer War; compare rooinek.
Example Sentences
- "When you've shouted "Rule Britannia", when you've sung "God Save The Queen", When you've finished killing Kruger with your mouth; Will you kindly drop a shilling in my little tambourine For a gentleman in khaki ordered South?"
- "But being the right shade of khaki or shit-brown is not enough."
- "1921, War work of the Bureau of Standards, no. 46, page 54. The English Government for a long time has used a type of pigmented dope cover, khaki colored by iron pigments and lampblack, which is called P. C. 10."
Ad