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off-color (comparative more off-color, superlative most off-color)

  1. Of the wrong color.
    • 1936, Chemical Industries, volume 38, page 400:
      Careful control of mixing at the central point reduces the possibility of off-color paint in some booths, and uniform pressure at the spray guns is easily maintained.
    • 2000, John Kenkel, Chemistry: An Industry-Based Laboratory Manual, page 74:
      Because of his reputable work with off-color and contaminated materials, I have asked Dr. Otto Speck of Colorama Consultants to give us some direction.
    • 2001, SPE/ANTEC 2001 Proceedings, page 3391:
      After some amount of time elapses, the transition phase from color A to color B will yield off-color product until the color change for color B is fully established in the system.
  2. (idiomatic) Dirty, vulgar or obscene, especially in a way that is unpleasant.
    He told an off-color joke.
    • 1996, James Lambert, The Macquarie Book of Slang, Sydney: Macquarie Library, page xii:
      [T]he equating of the female genitalia with a wound caused by an axe is a very off-colour metaphor.
    • 2010, Charles Carver, Brann and the Iconoclast, page 54:
      He seems to have crawled off the earth after his Texas itinerary, in company with the alleged ex-nun whom he was carting around the country to pander to the prurient appetites of off-color dames by relating naughty tales of desiring nuns and accommodating priests.
    • 2012, Gary L. Fanning, Things I Didn't Learn in Medical School:
      Overly risqué jokes and foul language are invitations to being charged with sexual abuse. I must admit to enjoying humor a great deal, and I am guilty of sharing all kinds of stories, some of which are slightly off-color, but far from lewd.
  3. (idiomatic) Different than usual.
    • 2007, Kevin Courrier, Captain Beefheart's Trout Mask Replica:
      Since Zappa treats subject matter, dialogue, and song as musical material, Permanent Damage has a casual off-color quality. Permanent Damage and An Evening with Wild Man Fischer were works of oddball sociology as much as they were rock and roll records.
    • 2014, Anne W. Mhorelund, Broken Branch: The Patchie Creek Story, page 691:
      Even the roadside sights seemed a little off-color and was just beginning to lose some of its summer luster.
    • 2015, Kristi Charish, Owl and the Japanese Circus, page 162:
      There was something funny about his eyes . . . something off-color and old . . . but he pulled the shades back down before I could get a good look.
  4. (idiomatic) Feeling mildly unwell.
    Synonym: under the weather
    I feel a bit off-color today.
    • 2009, Kalpana M. Naghnoor, Abstruse, page 111:
      Nihal Sheshan, one of our officers, tells me our chief has been a little off-color of late. Kind of disoriented sometimes.
    • 2010, Murray Stein, Jungian Psychoanalysis: Working in the Spirit of Carl Jung, page 311:
      One evening she was feeling off-color with a virus and was settled comfortably in the sitting-room.

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