12. The Meanings of Colors Vary by Culture

Description

1. How people see (12. The Meanings of Colors Vary by Culture ) Note on 12. The Meanings of Colors Vary by Culture , created by Alena Niadzelka on 29/03/2018.
Alena Niadzelka
Note by Alena Niadzelka, updated more than 1 year ago
Alena Niadzelka
Created by Alena Niadzelka over 6 years ago
18
0

Resource summary

Page 1

Colors have associations and meanings, for example, red means “in the red” or financial trouble, or it could mean danger or stop. Green means money or “go.” Pick colors carefully since they have these meanings. And different colors might mean different things to subgroups. A few colors have similar meanings everywhere (gold, for example, stands for success and high quality in most cultures), but most colors have different meanings in different cultures.    

Page 2

For example, in the U.S. white signifies purity and is used at weddings, but in other cultures, white is the color used for death and funerals. Happiness is associated with white, green, yellow, or red, depending on the part of the world you are in. David McCandless of InformationIsBeautiful.net has a color wheel that shows how different colors are viewed by different cultures: http://www.informationisbeautiful.net/visualizations/colours-in-cultures/      

Show full summary Hide full summary

Similar

10 Mind Mapping Strategies for Teachers
Andrea Leyden
Plano de Revisão Geral
miminoma
GCSE History of Medicine: Key Individuals
James McConnell
Biology AQA 3.1.2 Proteins
evie.daines
Creative Writing
amberbob27
Psychology flashcards memory
eharveyhudl
A View from the Bridge
Mrs Peacock
C1:Making Crude Oil Useful (Science-GCSE)
Temi Onas
Using GoConqr to study Art
Sarah Egan
Contract Law
sherhui94
regular preterite tense conjugation -ar verbs
Pamela Dentler