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complementary color

noun

  1. Art.
    1. one of a pair of primary or secondary colors opposed to the other member of the pair on a schematic chart or scale color wheel, as green opposed to red, orange opposed to blue, or violet opposed to yellow. Compare analogous color.
    2. the relationship of these pairs of colors perceived as completing or enhancing each other.


complementary color

  1. A secondary color that, when combined with the primary color whose wavelength it does not contain, produces white light. Thus yellow, which is produced by mixing the primary colors red and green, is the complementary color of blue.
  2. See Note at color


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Word History and Origins

Origin of complementary color1

First recorded in 1820–30
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Example Sentences

Go for similar, complementary colors that won’t clash and you’ll be good to go.

Every color makes objects near it take on the antagonistic or complementary color.

If the head is not moved, this complementary color has the same size and shape as the original colored piece of paper.

And the fat men, too, the "huge hills of flesh," shall they not have their complementary color in their windows to make them thin?

And in a red sunset the winter trees will sometimes throw shadows of green, the complementary color, on the snow.

Pottery may be adapted to a complementary color scheme by Rule 12i.

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