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Fawn is a light yellowish tan colour. It is usually used in reference to clothing, soft furnishings and bedding, as well as to a dog 's coat colour. It occurs in varying shades, ranging between pale tan to pale fawn to dark deer-red.
Fawn River State Fish Hatchery, a historic hatchery near Orland, Indiana; Fawn (colour) Fairey Fawn, a British single-engine light bomber of the 1920s; Fleet Fawn, a single-engine, two-seat training aircraft produced in the 1930s; HMS Fawn, the name of several ships in the British Navy; The Fawn, by The Sea and Cake
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Usage of collective nouns Notes Further reading External links Generic terms The terms in this table apply to many ...
Beige is the French word for the color of natural wool (freshly shorn example at the Royal Winter Fair).. Beige is variously described as a pale sandy fawn color, [1] a grayish tan, [2] a light-grayish yellowish brown, or a pale to grayish yellow. [3]
fawn hopping mouse, Notomys cervinus: novaeangliae: L: from New England: humpback whale, Megaptera novaeangliae; Sphaerophoria novaeangliae, a syrphid fly New England boneset, Eupatorium novae-angliae; New England aster, Symphyotrichum novae-angliae: novaeangliae – novae-angliae: novaehollandiae: L: from New Holland (Australia)
HP Labs' Online Color Thesaurus, which lists colors found through their Color Naming Experiment, gives tawny as CC7F3B, noting it is "rarely used", and lists its synonyms as: light chocolate, caramel, light brown, and camel. [4] [5] Dictionary of Color [6] lists tawny as AE6938 or A67B5B, and tawny birch as A87C6D, A67B5B or 958070.
A maenad with a nebris (and a thyrsus) Maenad with a Nebris. Nebris (νεβρίς; or nebride, from νεβρός, ‘fawn’) is a fawn skin, similar to an aegis, originally worn as a hunter's clothing item and later attributed to Dionysus (Euripides, Le Baccanti, 99, 125, 157, 790; Aristophanes, Le rane, 1209; Dionigi il Periegeta, 702, 946; Rufo Festo Avieno, 1.129).
Erythronium revolutum is most abundant within 100 miles (161 km) of the coast, at altitudes of less than 1000 m. [3] The plant is found in moist places such as streambanks, bogs, and wet redwood and mixed evergreen forest understory.