red

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Multiple Entries:
  red    re-    red-  

Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
red/red/
adjective (redder, reddest)
  • 1 of a colour at the end of the spectrum next to orange and opposite violet, as of blood or rubies.

    ■ (of hair or fur) of a reddish-brown colour.

    ■ (of a person's face) red due to embarrassment, anger, or heat.

    dated or offensive (of a people) having reddish skin.

  • 2 (of wine) made from dark grapes and coloured by their skins.
  • 3 of or denoting the suits hearts and diamonds in a pack of cards.
  • 4 denoting a red light or flag used as a signal to stop.

    ■ denoting something forbidden, dangerous, or urgent.

  • 5 (of a ski run) of the second-highest level of difficulty.
  • 6 informal, chiefly derogatory communist or socialist.
  • 7 archaic or literary involving bloodshed or violence.
noun
  • 1 red colour or pigment.
  • 2 informal, chiefly derogatory a communist or socialist.
  • 3 (the red) the situation of having spent more than is in one's bank account.
– phrases
the red planet Mars.
see red informal become very angry suddenly.
– derivatives
reddish adjective,
reddy adjective,
redly adverb,
redness noun.
– origin OE rēad, of Gmc origin.

Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
re-/riː/
prefix
  • 1 once more; afresh; anew: reactivate.

    ■ with return to a previous state: restore.

  • 2 (also red-) in return; mutually: resemble.

    ■ in opposition: repel.

  • 3 behind or after: relic.

    ■ in a withdrawn state: reticent.

    ■ back and away; down: recede.

  • 4 with frequentative or intensive force: resound.
  • 5 with negative force: recant.
– origin from L. re-, red- ‘again, back’.
usage: Words formed with re- tend to be unhyphenated: restore, reacquaint. An exception to this occurs when the word to which re- attaches begins with e, in which case a hyphen is often inserted for clarity: re-examine, re-enter. A hyphen is sometimes also used where the word formed with the prefix would be identical to an already existing word: re-cover (meaning ‘cover again’) not recover (meaning ‘get better in health’).

Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
red-
prefix variant of re- before a vowel (as in redolent).
'red' also found in these Oxford entries:

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