In the west, yellow is not a well-loved color. In a year 2000 survey, only 6% of respondents in Europe and America named it as their favorite color, compared with 45% for blue, 15% for green, 12% for red, and 10% for black. For 7% of respondents, it was their least favorite color. Yellow is considered a color of ambivalence and contradiction. It is associated with optimism and amusement, but also with betrayal, duplicity, and jealousy. speakers of modern
Standard Mandarin tend to map their use of
huáng to shades corresponding to English yellow. In Chinese symbolism, yellow, red, and green are masculine colors, while black and white are considered feminine. After the development of the theory of
five elements, the Chinese reckoned various correspondences. On a five season model, late summer was characterized by yellowing leaves. The legendary first emperor of China was called the
Yellow Emperor and the last,
Puyi (1906–67), described in his memoirs how every object which surrounded him as a child was yellow. "It made me understand from my most tender age that I was of a unique essence, and it instilled in me the consciousness of my 'celestial nature' which made me different from every other human." This was the basis of the 2007 "
very erotic very violent" meme, with the word "erotic"
calquing Chinese "yellow". File:Yellow River - panoramio.jpg | The
Yellow River at
Sanmenxia File:Portrait assis de l'empereur Jiajing.jpg|Portrait of the
Jiajing Emperor from the
Ming dynasty. File:乾隆皇帝老年肖像.jpg|The
Qianlong Emperor in court dress (18th century). File:Imperial Yellow Peking Glass Vase Closeup.jpg|
Daoguang period
Peking glass vase, a shade called "Imperial Yellow" after the
Qing banner File:20090528 Beijing Forbidden City 8074.jpg|Yellow roofs in the
Forbidden City File:Shanghainanjingroadpic1.jpg|Neon lights in modern Shanghai with a predominance of red and yellow.
Light and reason Yellow, as the color of sunlight when sun is near the horizon, is commonly associated with warmth. Yellow combined with red symbolized heat and energy. A room painted yellow feels warmer than a room painted white, and a lamp with yellow light seems more natural than a lamp with white light. As the color of light, yellow is also associated with knowledge and wisdom. In English and many other languages, "brilliant" and "bright" mean intelligent. In
Islam, the yellow color of gold symbolizes wisdom. In medieval European symbolism, red symbolized passion, blue symbolized the spiritual, and yellow symbolized reason. In many European universities, yellow gowns and caps are worn by members of the faculty of physical and natural sciences, as yellow is the color of reason and research.
Gold and blond In ancient Greece and Rome, the gods were often depicted with yellow, or blonde hair, which was described in literature as 'golden'. The color yellow was associated with the sun gods
Helios and
Apollo. It was fashionable in ancient Greece for men and women to dye their hair yellow, or to spend time in the sun to bleach it. In ancient Rome, prostitutes were required to bleach their hair, to be easily identified, but it also became a fashionable hair color for aristocratic women, influenced by the exotic blonde hair of many of the newly conquered slaves from Gaul, Britain, and Germany. However, in medieval Europe and later, the word yellow often had negative connotations; associated with betrayal, so yellow hair was more poetically called 'blond,' 'light', 'fair,' or most often "golden". A yellow
penalty card in a soccer match means warning, but not expulsion. The use of yellow paint in
video games to draw the player's attention to a specific spot
continues to be debated. File:Thomas SafTLiner C2 RF.jpg|In North America, school buses such as this one in
Albemarle County, Virginia are required to be painted yellow. File:Gelber Briefkasten der Deutschen Post.JPG|A mailbox in Germany. Yellow was the color of the early postal service in the Habsburg Empire. File:Crashtender BC.jpg|A crash tender of the
Royal Danish Air Force. File:Sea King HAR3 XZ585 at RIAT 2010 arp.jpg|An RAF Sea King rescue helicopter. File:Massimo Busacca, Referee, Switzerland (10).jpg|Yellow
penalty card used during an association football match
Optimism and pleasure Yellow is the color most associated with
optimism and
pleasure; it is a color designed to attract attention, and is used for amusement. Yellow dresses in fashion are rare, but always associated with gaiety and celebration. File:L'impératrice Eugénie à la Marie-Antoinette, 1854, Franz Xaver Winterhalter.jpg|The
Empress Eugenie dressed as
Marie Antoinette, painted by
Franz Winterhalter (1854) File:Kuznetsova by Repin.jpg|
Portrait of Madame Kuznetsova, by
Ilya Repin. (1901) File:James Tissot - The Ball.jpg|
The Ball by
James Tissot (1880) File:Basil Soda Yellow Dress - Paris Haute Couture Spring-Summer 2012.jpg|Yellow Dress – Paris Haute Couture Spring-Summer File:Flickr - dalbera - Danseuses de Kuchipudi (musée Guimet).jpg|
Kuchipudi dancers File:Kylie Minogue IMG 4379.JPG|Singer
Kylie Minogue performs at a Nobel Prize Concert
Mayan and Italian The ancient
Maya associated the color yellow with the direction South. The Maya glyph for "yellow" (k'an) also means "precious" or "ripe". "
Giallo", in Italian, refers to crime stories, both fictional and real. This association began in about 1930, when the first series of crime novels published in Italy had yellow covers.
Music •
The Beatles 1966 album
Revolver features the No. 1 hit, "
Yellow Submarine". Subsequently,
United Artists released an animated film in 1968 called
Yellow Submarine, based on the music of the Beatles. • The March 1967 album by
Donovan called
Mellow Yellow reached number 2 on the U.S.
Billboard charts in 1966 and number 8 in the UK in early 1967. The
song of the same name popularized a widely held belief that it was possible to get high by smoking scrapings from the inside of
banana peels. This rumor was actually started in 1966 by
Country Joe McDonald. •
Coldplay achieved worldwide fame with their 2000 single "
Yellow". • "
Yellow River" is a song recorded by the British band Christie in 1970. • The
Yellow River Piano Concerto is a
piano concerto arranged by a collaboration between musicians including Yin Chengzong and Chu Wanghua. Its premiere was in 1969 during the
Cultural Revolution.
Politics • Yellow as a
political color is most commonly associated with
liberalism,
libertarianism and
anarcho-capitalism. Contemporary political parties using yellow include the
Liberal Democrats and
UKIP in the United Kingdom, the
SNP in Scotland,
ACT in New Zealand, and
Libertarian Party in the United States. • In the United States, a
yellow dog Democrat was a
Southern voter who consistently voted for
Democratic candidates in the late 19th and early 20th centuries because of lingering resentment against the
Republicans dating back to the
Civil War and
Reconstruction period. Today the term refers to a hard-core Democrat, supposedly referring to a person who would vote for a "yellow dog" before voting for a Republican. • In China the
Yellow Turbans were a
Daoist sect that staged an extensive
rebellion during the
Han dynasty. • The 1986
People Power Revolution in the
Philippines was also known as the Yellow Revolution due to the presence of yellow ribbons during the demonstrations. Liberal and pro-democracy political parties and organizations such as
UNIDO,
PDP-Laban, and the
Liberal Party have used the color yellow. More recently, it has become a pejorative term used by some pro-Ferdinand Marcos and pro-Rodrigo Duterte against the opposition. • In France in November and December 2018, an opposition movement called the
Yellow Vests went into the streets to protest against the fiscal policies of President
Emmanuel Macron. They wore yellow safety vests, which French motorists are required by law to have in their cars.
Selected national and international flags Three of the ten most populous countries in the world (China, India and Brazil) have yellow or gold in their flag, representing about half of the world's population. While many flags use yellow, their symbolism varies widely, from civic virtue to golden treasure, golden fields, the desert, royalty, the keys to Heaven and the leadership of the Communist Party. In classic European
heraldry, yellow, along with white, is one of the two
metals (called gold and silver) and therefore flags following heraldic design rules must use either yellow or white to separate any of their other colors (see the
rule of tincture and
insignia). File:Flag of Belgium.svg|
Flag of Belgium (1831). The yellow comes from the yellow lion in the coat of arms of the
Duchy of Brabant, founded in 1183–84. File:Flag of Bhutan.svg|
Flag of Bhutan (1956). The Bhutan flag features
Druk, the thunder dragon of
Bhutanese mythology. The yellow represents civic tradition, the red the Buddhist spiritual tradition. File:Flag of Brazil.svg|
Flag of Brazil (1889). The yellow color was inherited from the flag of the
Empire of Brazil (1822–1889), where it represented the color of the
House of Habsburg. File:Flag of Brunei.svg|
Flag of Brunei (1956). In Southeast Asia yellow is the color of royalty. it is the color of the
Sultan of Brunei, and also appears on the flag of Thailand and of Malaysia. File:Flag of Chad.svg|
Flag of Chad (1959). The color yellow here represents the sun and the desert in the north of the country. This flag is identical to that of Romania, except that it uses a slightly darker indigo blue rather than cobalt blue. File:Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg|
Flag of the People's Republic of China (1949). The four small gold stars represent the workers, peasants, urban middle class, and rural middle class. The large star represents the
Chinese Communist Party. File:Flag of Colombia.svg|
Flag of Colombia. The asymmetric design of the flag is based on the old
Flag of Gran Colombia. The yellow color represents the golden treasure taken from Colombia over the centuries. File:Flag of Germany.svg|
Flag of Germany. Black, red and yellow were the colors of the
Holy Roman Emperor, and, in 1919, of the German
Weimar Republic. The modern German flag was adopted in 1949. File:Flag of Jamaica.svg|
Flag of Jamaica (1962). It is currently the only national flag that does not contain a shade of the colors red, white, or blue. File:Flag of Lithuania.svg|
Flag of Lithuania (1918 to 1940, restored in 1989, modified in 2004). Yellow represents the sun, light and goodness. File:Flag of Malaysia.svg|
Flag of Malaysia (original version, 1950, current version 1963.) The yellow crescent represents Islam, the yellow star the unity of the fourteen states of Malaysia. The red and white stripes (like the stripes on the U.S. flag) are adopted from the flag of the
British East India Company. File:Flag of Mozambique.svg|
Flag of Mozambique (1983). The colors are those of the Marxist Liberation Front of Mozambique, or
FRELIMO, which rules the country. Yellow represents the country's mineral wealth. File:Flag of the Philippines.svg|
Flag of the Philippines (1898). The yellow sun is in the middle of the triangle shape. File:Flag of Romania.svg|
Flag of Romania (1848, and again in 1989, after the fall of the Communist regime.) Blue, yellow and red were the colors of the
Wallachian uprising of 1821, and the 1848 revolution. Yellow represents justice. File:Flag of Spain.svg|
Flag of Spain (1978). The yellow in the Spanish flag comes from the traditional
Crown of Castille and the
Crown of Aragon. The general design was adopted in 1785 for the Spanish Navy, to be visible from a great distance at sea. File:Flag of Sweden.svg|
Flag of Sweden (adopted 1906, but colors in use since at least the mid-16th century). The legend says that in 1157, during the
First Swedish Crusade, the Swedish king
Eric the Holy saw a golden cross appear in the blue sky. File:Flag of Ukraine.svg|
Flag of Ukraine (1992 (originally in 1918)). File:Flag of the Vatican City.svg|
Flag of Vatican City (1929). The yellow color represents the golden key of the Kingdom of heaven, described in the
Book of Matthew of the
New Testament, and part of the Papal seal on the flag. File:Flag of Vietnam.svg|
Flag of Vietnam (1955). The big gold star represents five main classes (laborers, soldiers, peasants, intellectuals and bourgeois).
Defunct flags File:Heiliges Römisches Reich - Reichssturmfahne vor 1433.svg|The banner of the Holy Roman Empire (15th century). The black, yellow and red colors reappeared first in 1848 and then in the 20th century in the German flag. File:Flag of the Gran Colombia (1819-1820).svg|(1819) The flag of
Gran Colombia, which won independence from Spain, then broke into three countries (
Colombia,
Venezuela and
Ecuador) in 1830. File:Flag of the Qing Dynasty (1889-1912).svg|Imperial flag of the
Qing dynasty, China (1890–1912), the last dynasty of China, overthrown by the
Xinhai Revolution of 1911. File:Flag of South Vietnam.svg|Flag of
South Vietnam (1955–75). This was the flag of the anti-communist southern part of Vietnam during the
Vietnam War. It was replaced by the flag of North Vietnam after communist forces took
Saigon on 30 April 1975. File:Flag of East Germany.svg|The flag of
East Germany (1959–90). It differs from the West German flag by the presence of a communist symbol in the center, and it fell out of use when Germany was reunified after the fall of the
Berlin Wall.
Religion • In
Buddhism, the saffron colors of robes to be worn by monks were defined by the
Buddha himself and his followers in the 5th century BCE. The robe and its color is a sign of renunciation of the outside world and commitment to the order. The candidate monk, with his master, first appears before the monks of the monastery in his own clothes, with his new robe under his arm, and asks to enter the order. He then takes his vows, puts on the robes, and with his begging bowl, goes out to the world. Thereafter, he spends his mornings begging and his afternoons in contemplation and study, either in a forest, garden, or in the monastery. According to Buddhist scriptures and commentaries, the robe dye is allowed to be obtained from six kinds of substances: roots and tubers, plants, bark, leaves, flowers and fruits. The robes should also be boiled in water a long time to get the correctly sober color. Saffron and ochre, usually made with dye from the
curcuma longa plant or the heartwood of the
jackfruit tree, are the most common colors. The so-called forest monks usually wear ochre robes and city monks saffron, though this is not an official rule. The color of robes also varies somewhat among the different "vehicles", or schools of Buddhism, and by country, depending on their doctrines and the dyes available. The monks of the strict
Vajrayana, or
Tantric Buddhism, practiced in
Tibet, wear the most colorful robes of saffron and red. The monks of
Mahayana Buddhism, practiced mainly in Japan, China and Korea, wear lighter yellow or saffron, often with white or black. Monks of
Hinayana Buddhism, practiced in Southeast Asia, usually wear ochre or saffron color. Monks of the forest tradition in Thailand and other parts of Southeast Asia wear robes of a brownish ochre, dyed from the wood of the
jackfruit tree. • In
Hinduism,
Krishna is commonly portrayed
dressed in yellow. Yellow and saffron are also the colors worn by
sadhu, or wandering holy men in India.
Ganesha or Ganpati is mostly dressed with a dhotar in yellow, which is popularly known as
pivla pitambar and is considered to be the most auspicious one. • In
Sikhism: The Sikh Rehat Maryada clearly states that the
Nishan Sahib hoisted outside every
Gurudwara should be xanthic (Basanti in
Punjabi) or greyish blue (modern day
Navy blue) (Surmaaee in
Punjabi) color. • In
Islam, the yellow color of gold symbolizes wisdom. • In the religions of the islands of
Polynesia, yellow is a sacred color, the color of the divine essence; the word "yellow" in the local languages is the same as the name of the
curcuma longa plant, which is considered the food of the gods. File:Rank celebration of Thai Buddhist monk 1.jpg|Buddhist monks at the promotion ceremony of a monk in Thailand File:Buddhist monks of Tibet7.jpg|Buddhist monks in
Tibet File:Ueno monk.jpg|A Japanese Buddhist monk in downtown Tokyo File:Sadou Kathmandu 04 04.jpg|A Hindu
sadhu, or ascetic wandering monk or holy man, in
Kathmandu, Nepal. File:Gesupietrochiave.jpg|Christ giving the golden key of the kingdom heaven to
Saint Peter (1481–82), by
Pietro Perugino. The golden key is the symbol of the Pope. File:Benedykt XVI (2010-10-17) 4.jpg|
Pope Benedict XVI. The Pope traditionally wears gold and white outside St. Peter's Basilica. File:Nishan Sahib in blue, at Baba Phoola Singh di Burj in Amritsar.jpg|
Sikh Nishan Sahib in blue, at
Akali Phoola Singh di Burj in
Amritsar New Age Spiritual Metaphysics • In the
metaphysics of the
New Age author,
Alice A. Bailey, in her system called the
Seven Rays which classifies humans into seven different metaphysical psychological types, the
fourth ray of
harmony through conflict is represented by the color
yellow. People who have this metaphysical psychological type are said to be
on the Yellow Ray." • Yellow is used to symbolically represent the third, solar plexus
chakra (
Manipura). •
Psychics who claim to be able to observe the
aura with their
third eye report that someone with a yellow aura is typically someone who is in an
occupation requiring intellectual acumen, such as a scientist.
Sports wears the yellow jersey in the 2012
Tour de France. • In Association football (soccer), the
referee shows a
yellow card to indicate that a player has been officially warned because they have committed a foul or have wasted time. • Originally in
Rugby league and then later, also in
Rugby Union, the referee shows a
yellow card to indicate that a player has been sent to the
sin bin. • In
cycle racing, the
yellow jersey – or
maillot jaune – is awarded to the leader in some stage races. The tradition was begun in the
Tour de France where the sponsoring ''L'Auto
newspaper (later L'Équipe'') was printed on distinctive yellow
newsprint. P1 of
Western Power Distribution, used for electricity line inspection • National teams of
Brazil,
Sweden and
Ukraine usually play in yellow shirts.
Transportation • In some countries,
taxicabs are commonly yellow. This practice began in Chicago, where taxi entrepreneur
John D. Hertz painted his taxis yellow based on a
University of Chicago study alleging that yellow is the color most easily seen at a distance. • In Canada and the United States,
school buses are almost uniformly painted a yellow color (often referred to as "
school bus yellow") for purposes of visibility and safety, and British bus operators such as
FirstGroup are attempting to introduce the concept there. • "
Caterpillar yellow" and "high-visibility yellow" are used for highway construction equipment. • In the
rules of the road, yellow (called "amber" in Britain) is a
traffic light signal meaning "slow down", "caution", or "slow speed ahead". It is intermediate between green (go) and red (stop). In
railway signaling, yellow is often the color for warning, slow down, such as with distant
signals. •
Selective yellow is used in some automotive headlamps and fog lights to reduce the dazzling effects of rain, snow, and fog.
Maritime signaling • In
International maritime signal flags a yellow flag denotes the letter "Q". It also means a ship asserts that it does not need to be quarantined. == Idioms and expressions ==