No. The hard g sound does not exist in Spanish.
Orange, as of the color between red and yellow; similar to the color of a ripe orange.
There is two ways to say orange in Spanish, the meanings are different though. Naranja is Spanish for the kind of orange you eat and anaranjado is Spanish for the color orange.
The Latin word for orange is aranjia.
Cat is "gato", orange (both the color and the fruit) is "naranja" with the j making an h sound. In Spanish the adjective follows the noun, so if you meant to say "the orange cat", you would say that as "el gato naranja." I am unaware of any kind of orange called a cat orange, but if there was one, the Spanish for it would likely be "la naranja del gato".
The Spanish word for the orange fruit is "naranja."
Purple is "morado," brown is "marrón," and orange is "naranja" in Spanish.
naranja
No. The hard g sound does not exist in Spanish.
It means, "Similar to the color of an orange," or"orange-colored."
Orange, as of the color between red and yellow; similar to the color of a ripe orange.
Naranja. "Orange."
"Orange juice" in Spanish is "jugo de naranja".
As in the fruit, naranja. As in the color, anaranjado.
The gender of a word is completely contingent on the language in question. Orange in French and Spanish is feminine (une orange, una naranja). Orange in Arabic and Hebrew is masculine (portoqaal, tapuz).
There is two ways to say orange in Spanish, the meanings are different though. Naranja is Spanish for the kind of orange you eat and anaranjado is Spanish for the color orange.
The orange is native to China and Indochina.