And perhaps at one point they ate clay, so they would have been more reddish in color, or perhaps the dirt they were consuming was more reddish in color.
Googled it. It wasn’t because of worms in general. It was from Vermiculus which is the diminutive of Vermis but also was how they called a very specific worm, at some point in time the only way they knew where to get red pigments from was by crushing this worm.
Ver- words are often green because of Latin. “Verde” in Italian, “Vert” in French, “Verdant” in English
Yeah, except for vermilion which comes from latin vermis and means worm.
Vermillion is such a pretty word to mean worm colored…
I guess a worm can be cute if you give it a bow to wear.
But worms are brown.
Actually worms are transparent but they eat dirt, so they’re brown.
There are plenty of pink and red worms out there. And grey. And some green. A few blue.
And perhaps at one point they ate clay, so they would have been more reddish in color, or perhaps the dirt they were consuming was more reddish in color.
Googled it. It wasn’t because of worms in general. It was from Vermiculus which is the diminutive of Vermis but also was how they called a very specific worm, at some point in time the only way they knew where to get red pigments from was by crushing this worm.
Same as vermicelli. Pasta that looks like vermin/worms.
Also “verde” in Portuguese, but red is “vermelho”
Verd/vert is the prefix. You can’t just cut off the last letter.
Verily.
Yeah and million is for dollars which is green.
in portuguese vermelho is red tho lol