Hallo allerseits 🙂 Ich schreibe eine Forschungsarbeit über Ausdruckseinheiten (feste Ausdrücke, Redewendungen und Phrasen) auf Deutsch mit dem "Farbe" Komponente (zum Beispiel englische Redewendungen: Einmal auf einem blauen Mond, haben ich grüne Finger, aus heiterem Himmel usw.) Ich brauche Ihre Hilfe und ich möchte Statistiken bereitstellen. Wenn Sie in Deutschland leben und Deutsch sprechen, teilen Sie bitte mit, ob Sie solche Redewendungen oder Ausdrücke verwenden. Wenn ja, was sind sie? Und wie häufig sind sie? Vielleicht hat einer Ihrer Verwandten einen Lieblingsausdruck mit a "Farbe" Komponente. Ich würde mich über Informationen freuen, danke im Voraus. Dies ist ein sehr interessantes Thema für mich!

    https://www.reddit.com/gallery/1nof7j9

    Von x3nw3

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    1. Older People „Ach Du grüne Neune“ (oh my god)

      „Sein blaues Wunder erleben“ (Getting a mighty surprise)

      „Das gelbe vom Ei“ (The bees knees)

      „ich sehe schwarz für…“ (I don’t see a/any more chance for…)

      „durch die rosarote Brille“ (Through rose tinted glasses)

      „Eine alleinstehende frau würde sich in einer violetten Sitzgruppe umbringen“ (A single woman would kill herself in/on a purple sofa) /s

    2. „alles im grünen Bereich“ (literally „everything in the green area“) which means „everything is fine“.

    3. „das blaue vom Himmel versprechen“ maybe? It’s when you make unrealistic promises.

    4. WinifredZachery on

      „Die sind sich nicht ganz grün“, roughly translated as they are not particularly green toward each other.

      It means that two persons don’t like each other very much.

    5. Miserable_Boss_8933 on

      „Grüner Daumen“ would be the same in German as your „green fingers“.

      „Ins Blaue hinein“… z.B. fahren, means doing something without a plan.

      I think both are very common expressions in Germany.

    6. We have the colloquial expression „Blau machen“ (to do blue? to make blue?) for skipping school.
      Also „Blau sein“ (to be blue) is a colloquial term for being drunk.

      Slightly shady tactic btw. to use random cat photos as clickbait, but i can’t say it didn’t work.

    7. Affectionate_Walk610 on

      „Kreidebleich“ beeing pale out of some strong emotion or sickness.
      „Farbeimer“ paint can, just because it sounds great as a name.

    8. Sea-Oven-182 on

      Dasselbe in grün – The same in green.

      2 different things that are more or less the same.

      My grandma always said: „Sell chasch grüe aamole und de Haase gää!“ – You can paint it green and feed it to the rabbits. Meaning: something is absolutely useless.

    9. „blau machen“ – to skip work/school/etc

      „schwarz fahren“ – to travel without buying a ticket

      „einen grünen Daumen haben“ – to have green fingers

    10. DieDummePnudding on

      „Rot sehen“: „seeing red“ (getting very angry),
      „Noch grün hinter den Ohren sein“: „still being green behind the ears“: (still being very young/having little life experience),
      „Blau sein“: „being blue“ (being drunk, informal),
      „Gelb vor Neid sein“: „being yellow from envy“ (being very envious),
      „Einen grünen Daumen haben“: „having a green thumb“ (being skilled/talented with gardening and plants),
      There’s many more, but those are the first ones I thought about that I didn’t spot in other comments yet.

    11. HowAboutThatUsername on

      „Blau sein“ = being drunk

      „Grün vor Neid“ = green from jealousy

      „Rot sehen“ = seeing red from anger

      „Sich schwarz ärgern“ = turning black from anger

    12. „Rot sehen“ to get angry/becoming „blind“ to everything but ur anger, related to bullfighting

      „Es gibt nicht nur Schwarz oder Weiß“ „Schwarz-Weiß-Denken“ -> theres not only „true“ oder „false“; „yes“ or „no“/ someone only thinks in extremes -> related to that we have „Graubereich“ grey area, a space between two extremes/a clear answer

      Edit: Those are things i actually use regulary, i think a lot of the phrases mentioned (like „ins Blaue“ „blau machen“ „grün vor neid“ …) are more outdated and mostly in written language

    13. Schwarzfahren = ride without a ticket

      Ins Schwarze treffen = hit something right in the correct spot, like bullseye

      Weiße Weste = to be innocent

      Gelb vor Neid = to be very envious

      Grauer Alltag = drab everyday life

      Braune Vergangenheit = referring to Nazi past

      Grünes Licht geben = to give someone the go-ahead/green light

    14. Apart from what everyone else already mentioned, another one would be „Schwarzmalerei“, which means to paint something in a bad light.

    15. „Das ist nicht das Gelbe vom Ei“ (that is not the yellow part of the egg = something is not good, not useful)

      „jemandem das Blaue vom Himmel versprechen“ (promise someone the blue from the sky = making false promises, promising too much)

      „ins Blaue raten/fahren/…“ (guess/drive/… into the blue = into unknown)

      „rot sehen“ (to see red, same meaning as in English)

    16. “Vom blauen Affen gebissen sein” – archaic, literally ‘to have been bit by a blue monkey’, means being crazy/irrational/nonsensical (my Latin teacher would scold us asking whether we’d been bitten by a blue monkey😅)

    17. Rot sehen (seeing nothing but rage)

      Schwarz sehen (seeing a bleak future)

      Schwarz malen (painting a bleak picture of the future)

      Grün hinter den Ohren sein (being inexperienced in something, sort of being a greenhorn)

    18. universe_from_above on

      Jemanden grün und blau schlagen – Hit someone until they are black and blue.

      Similarly, a black eye is a blue eye (blaues Auge) in German. 

      And, very racist, but I do wonder if anyone knows this saying:

      „Grün und blau, Polackenfrau.“ 

      It translates to „green and blue, Polish woman“ in a very derogatory way. It can mean both the colors of the clothes and the bruises on the skin. 

      My grandmother, born on the border to Poland in the 1920s, used to tell me that the old women in her area used to say that when the young women would match green and blue clothes. She never was quite sure what they meant, apart from it obviously being racist. 

    19. TypicalGuppy on

      „Das kommt aus dem Blauen“ – lit. „This comes out of the blue“, something unexpected happens.

      „Grün hinter den Ohren sein“ – lit. „To be green behind the ears“, to be inexperienced or new to something.

    20. „Einen gelben holen“ or „getting a yellow“ means calling in sick to work

    21. Spacing-Guild-Mentat on

      „Der ist **grün** hinter den Ohren“ – (English idiom: „he is wet behind the ears“) – relatively common

      „**schwarz** sehen“ – („to see black“ means to be pessimistic about something) – very common

      „**rot** sehen“ – („to see red“ means to get angry about a certain topic) – very common

      „auf **rosa** wolken schweben“ – („floating in pink clouds“ means to be very euphoric about something) – relatively common

      „jemandem den **schwarzen** Peter zuschieben“ – („to give someone the black Peter“ means the same as the English idiom „to pass the buck“) – very common

      „**blau**machen“ – („to make blue“ – sounds horrible in English but means to skip work or school) – extremely common

      „das ist nicht das **gelbe** vom Ei“ – („this is not the yellow of the egg“ means it’s not the best) – very common

    22. misswhovivian on

      – „weiß wie die Wand sein“ (literally „to be as white as a wall“) – to be very pale, usually from sickness, unease, fear etc., same as being as white as a sheet

      – „blauäugig sein“ (literally „to be blue-eyed“) – to be very naive

      – „blauer Brief“ (literally „blue letter“) – a letter your parents get sent when you misbehave in school etc. (not actually blue)

      – „roter Faden“ (literally „red thread“) – common theme or thread in something

      – „grünes Licht geben/bekommen“ (literally „to give/get the green light“) – to give/get the go-ahead

      I don’t know if that one fits 100%, but I’ll mention it anyway:

      – „bekannt sein wie ein bunter Hund“ (literally „being as famous as a colourful dog“) – to be known all over, to be the talk of the town

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