The adjective "naranja" is invariable, which means its form does not change according to the gender or number of the noun it describes.
A feminine noun is almost always used with feminine articles and adjectives (e.g. la mujer bonita, la luna llena).
feminine noun1. (fruit)
a. orange El jugo de naranja es mi bebida preferida por la mañana.Orange juice is my preferred drink in the morning.
An adjective is a word that describes a noun (e.g. the big dog).
adjective2. (color)
a. orange Nos falta el crayón naranja del paquete.We're missing the orange crayon from the pack.
Copyright © Curiosity Media Inc.naranjaAn adjective is a word that describes a noun (e.g. the big dog).
adjectiveA noun is a word referring to a person, animal, place, thing, feeling or idea (e.g. man, dog, house).
Noun4. (colloquial)
a. ¡naranjas de la china!no way!
5. (fam fig)
a. media naranjaother o better half
Copyright © 2006 Harrap Publishers Limited
naranja
1 (fruta) orangenaranja amarga naranja cajel Seville orange Las [naranjas amargas] están granando. Se hace una buena mermelada con ellas, pero la producción es demasiado grande.
naranja navel navel orange
naranja sanguina blood orange
naranja zajarí Seville orange
2 ¡naranjas!
¡naranjas de la China!
no way! (familiar); nothing doing! (familiar) le pregunté que si quería ir al cine conmigo y me dijo que naranjas
encontrar su media naranja to meet one's match; esperar la media naranja to wait for Mr Right/one's ideal woman; mi media naranja my better half
adjective
[+color] orange (color) orange el naranja es su color favorito
Collins Complete Spanish Electronic Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers 2011Machine Translators
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