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单词 orange
释义

orange1

noun ˈɒrɪn(d)ʒ
  • 1A large round juicy citrus fruit with a tough bright reddish-yellow rind.

    eat plenty of oranges
    mass noun a slice of orange
    as modifier orange juice
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Today being the feast day of St Clement, the fourth pope and patron saint of mariners and ironmongers, I have put oranges and lemons to good use in my mother's recipe for a whisky marmalade.
    • When an orange is juiced, fibre and other health-giving elements are left behind.
    • There was a tree toward the front, its branches laden with big, bright oranges.
    • Grate the rind from the two large oranges and squeeze out the juice.
    • For the last 20 years I've had the juice of four oranges for breakfast, using a classic manual squeezer, which I drink with toast and a cup of tea.
    • Squeeze the juice from all the oranges and the lime in with it and stir.
    • A little further down the coast we admire the rickety wooden fishermen's huts when a man in his seventies eating an orange starts chatting.
    • In fact the grapefruit is simply a hybrid between a pomelo and an orange.
    • On another day they would have been dead and buried by the time the oranges were passed round.
    • The half-time whistle sounded and traditional sliced oranges were brought round on trays for fans wilting from the sticky heat.
    • Try also the top of a carrot, half an apple, half a green pepper (remove the seeds) and half an orange (not too juicy).
    • These days, juicy, delicious oranges are practically synonymous with vitamin C.
    • All in all, however, citrus covers the largest tonnage if you include oranges, grapefruit, lemons and smaller varietals such as naartjies.
    • This category included lemons, oranges, mandarins, tangelos, and grapefruits, with lemons being the most common type.
    • Dried beans and legumes, oranges and orange juice, peanuts and leafy green vegetables all contain folate.
    • Slice each orange into 5mm rounds, trying to reserve as much juice as you can.
    • We walked from her back gate down the gravel path through the village center, where a lush community citrus orchard offered oranges and grapefruits.
    • Cut the peel from the orange, slice the flesh thinly and serve at the side of each slice of cake.
    • The Maschio Prime Arance, made from the juice and pulp of Italian oranges, is like biting into an orange with a kick.
    • After turning it over, I then squeezed the juice of half each of an orange, lime and lemon on it.
    1. 1.1British mass noun A drink made from or flavoured with oranges.
      a vodka and orange
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The danger lies in alcopops, which are flavoured with things like cranberry or orange to disguise the taste of vodka.
      • ‘A passenger asked one trainee steward for a screwdriver - you know, vodka and orange,’ Duggal relates.
      • The student's friends thought it was likely that her drink, a vodka and orange, had been spiked either as she was at the bar or as she was walking across the dance floor, as it was a large, open glass.
      • Dyer is putting on an exhibition of running around, sort of like a mini-Pete Sampras lookalike who's drunk too much fizzy orange.
      • ‘Until now, it has not been possible, for example, to market a drink containing both orange and cream,’ said Muir.
      • As I gulped down my pint of Bud, Tony washed down a pack of dry roasted with a diet coke and Debbie sipped at her vodka and orange.
      • Is it too late for a vodka and orange?
      • But before driving home from work, what harm could a quick pint, small glass of wine or harmless vodka and orange with a colleague cause?
      • Five minutes later he took off his hat, pulled a comb out of his pocket, dipped it in a glass of vodka and orange on the table, stood up and then combed his hair in the mirror over the fireplace.
      • It was at this time that Crete made a run for the bar to claim his fifth vodka and orange.
      • After my second double vodka and orange in 15 minutes, I'm beginning to feel it.
      • Martin found he liked the strange new drink, but Jack wisely made his next drink orange and lemonade.
      • Meanwhile, a vodka and orange, tequila or gin and tonic can all be had for a reasonable Rp 35,000.
      • Anyway it has been a hard drive there and back and I have a vodka and orange getting warm.
      • While all eyes were on the news channel, I was just happy to watch her move gracefully around the pub sipping her Vodka and orange.
      • Vodka and orange seemed more Norwood's type of drink.
      • In July she had spent the evening at a nearby pub when she had had several pints and a glass of vodka and orange.
  • 2The leathery-leaved evergreen tree that bears the orange, native to warm regions of South and SE Asia. Oranges are a major commercial crop in many warm regions of the world.

    Genus Citrus, family Rutaceae: several species, in particular the sweet orange (C. sinensis) and the Seville orange

    Example sentencesExamples
    • They came to a connected room, full of oranges and palm trees.
    • Her romantic garden showcases David Austin roses, hydrangeas, camellias, orange trees and numerous perennial and annual plants.
    • My neighbor politely said, ‘Uh, are you referring to the orange trees we have in our yards?’
    • Lo and behold, our backyard came with an orange tree and a Meyer lemon tree.
    • Wheat, grapevines, almonds, olives, and oranges were planted from the beginning.
    • The view from the wooden deck is a mesh of banana, mango, orange, and momonchino trees.
    • Everywhere you turn there are almond, fig, lemon and orange trees and olive groves.
    • I played with my brothers and sisters in a sprawling garden full of orange and lemon trees.
    • Morocco's plains are cultivated with a variety of crops, such as oranges, figs, olives, almonds, barley, and wheat.
    • When he did end up in the right place, he could go and look from his windows to see orange trees, oleanders and a jacaranda across the lawns and below.
    • Terracotta pots overflow with cactuses and red, pink and purple flowers, above which spread expansive palms and orange and lemon trees.
    • I do know that the soil they throw up has a lovely crumbly texture; it can be mixed with potting compost to make a heavier compost ideal for permanent pot plantings like bay trees, figs and oranges.
    • Now the ancient passes have opened up and tourism, as well as the fertile land that supports oranges and avocados, is bringing some wealth to the region.
    • Zhaar or orange flower water is an extract of the Bergamot orange tree.
    • Everything green is inside, so this is the image I've still got about my childhood in Morocco; just the houses with the orange trees, olive trees and the palm trees which were introduced from the south up to the city of Fez.
    1. 2.1 Used in names of plants with similar fruit or flowers to the orange tree, e.g. mock orange.
  • 3mass noun A bright reddish-yellow colour like that of the skin of a ripe orange.

    tones of golden brown and orange
    count noun the most shocking of pinks and oranges
    Example sentencesExamples
    • ‘We are the only school in the country that has orange as its primary colour,’ director of athletics Jake Crouthamel outlined.
    • Chocolate brown, pink and orange are mixed with succulent berry shades and a field of soft greens.
    • His penchant for bright colours - orange and yellow are favourites - only add to his reputation for excitement and flamboyance.
    • Organic and earthy colours dominate with burnt orange, rust, sky blue and many shades of green.
    • A wide range of colours was used - shades of gold, orange, green, brown and gray.
    • Body colors include bright orange, pink, yellow, dark brown and even black.
    • I like the bright saturated orange of the bottles on the shelf.
    • We also changed the colors from brown to bright orange, which gives a higher energy feeling.
    • At times, warm, undulating tones of pale pink, magenta, purple and orange hypnotically pulse through the cylinders.
    • For those wanting something more bright, there are colours like orange, green, and lemon.
    • The sun was near the horizon and the sky was a bright mix of orange, pink, and purple.
    • Any colors composed of red or green, such as brown, purple or orange, don't look the same as they would to someone who sees all colors.
    • Inside the veils, exotic plants with flowers of all colors: bright orange, reds, pinks, and yellows.
    • We mean really bright colours like orange, yellow, red, and green.
    • They were normal, except that the irises were streaks of red, purple, orange, and pink; like a sunset.
    • The clouds in the sky were bright with pastel colors of red, orange, purple, pink, and blue.
    • Apart from just red, blue and green, there are various other colours, including orange, purple and yellow.
    • Stone arches, shelves of antique bottles, jars and jugs and the colour scheme of orange and terracotta give the place a rustic feel.
    • Hot pink, vibrant orange, purple, turquoise and green of any shade were the colours of the day, with ladies strutting around like beautiful birds of paradise.
    • Plants with sunset colours of bright orange and crimson stand out and make an easy target for the eye.
  • 4with modifier A butterfly with mainly or partly orange wings.

    Several species in the family Pieridae, in particular American species in the genera Colias and Eurema

adjective ˈɒrɪn(d)ʒ
  • Reddish yellow.

    there was an orange glow in the sky
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Not sure if I'm going to have to get a bouffant hairstyle and start wearing orange foundation.
    • Looking resplendent in a raw silk orange dress, 28-year-old Norma O'Donoghue was the unanimous choice of the judges.
    • Beta-carotene is a nutrient found in yellow and orange vegetables and fruit that can be converted to vitamin A in the body.
    • He was wearing a polo shirt with white, red, yellow and orange hoops, the white hoops being thicker than the rest.
    • The very thought of orange skies and yellow sand hurt her head.
    • Its delicate, red, yellow and orange tubular flowers are quite striking but I am not sure how well the plants will grow in our cooler climate.
    • His wings were orange and striped with white on the undersides.
    • Red, yellow and orange peppers are sweet and less spicy.
    • Made from bright orange, green or pink wool-covered foam, the seat perches upon thin steel legs.
    • The orange bag had two yellow folders, one black folder with stars and swirls, and one Mickey Mouse folder.
    • Those once ubiquitous garish yellow and orange ski suits are now quite rare and look dated.
    • The roof is a reddish orange color, the walls washed-out gold, and all trimmed in wood a shade or two darker than the roof.
    • The city was gorgeous during the fall, the yellow and orange leaves really giving the streets a special glow.
    • Yellow or orange flame means one is wasting gas.
    • He looked down at her light, yellow and orange skirt.
    • Its creamy yellow to deep orange flowers glow like sunshine even on the darkest day until the frost finally kills them at the end of the year.
    • The lizard had a skinny red body, with a yellow underside and orange nails.
    • The sun was setting in the distance giving the evening an orange and yellow glow.
    • Geoff Sowden, of Haxby, contacted the Evening Press when he noticed the distinctive orange and black butterflies filling his garden every morning.
    • There were sunshine yellow trains, orange trains, blue ones and green.

Derivatives

  • orangey

  • adjective ˈɒrɪn(d)ʒi
    • Marigolds are in fact grown as field crops in Mexico to provide the US with chicken-feed to make egg yolks orangey.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • ‘For lips, there is a shift towards orangey reds or corals,’ says Molloy.
      • In Mary Dolman's two works, the orangy red fox lopes through a snowy scene with the sky above repeating the colour of the fox.
      • Mars becomes a lot more orangy, but I can't make out any particular shape, not without a tripod or something, anyway.
      • The sun made an inauspicious appearance in the morning sky, casting a orangy glow through the plum colored clouds along the horizon.
  • orangish

  • adjective
    • It had no door and Marle could see an orangish color in the main room.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • It occurs as dark brown, red-brown, yellow-brown, orangish, and amber crystals.
      • Most of the nodules, when cut with a diamond saw, were translucent to opaque and whitish-gray, but some had a reddish to orangish tint.
      • By this time, the furniture is all covered with a light film of orangish dirt, the windows are grimy, and the garden, driveway and trees all look like they have recently emerged from a sea of dust.
      • It was still very light out but there was an orangish coloration on the mountains.

Origin

Late Middle English: from Old French orenge (in the phrase pomme d'orenge), based on Arabic nāranj, from Persian nārang.

  • The name of the orange, first recorded in English in medieval times, goes back through Arabic to Persian, although the native home of the fruit may have been southeast Asia. The Arabs brought what we now call the Seville orange, or bitter orange, to Sicily in the Middle Ages, and from Sicily it was introduced to the rest of Europe. In the 16th century the Portuguese brought the sweet orange from China, and gave us the fruit which we now know simply as the orange, at first distinguished as a China orange. The children's game of oranges and lemons is recorded from the early 19th century but is probably a lot older. The song lists the bells of a number of London churches, beginning with St Clement's, and the final line runs ‘Here comes a chopper to chop off your head.’ This has led to the theory that the song looks back to the days of public executions, when the condemned person was taken in procession to execution while the church bells were tolled. There may also be an association with the marriages of King Henry VIII, and the beheading of two of his wives. The Orangemen of Northern Ireland are members or supporters of the Orange Order, a Protestant political society in favour of continued union with Britain. Their name comes from the wearing of orange badges as a symbol of adherence to King William III, who defeated the Catholic James II at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690. William was also known as William of Orange, a town in southern France which was the home of the ancestors of the Dutch royal house.

Orange2

proper nounɔʀɑ̃ʒˈɒrɪndʒôˈräNZH
  • A town in southern France, on the River Rhône, home of the ancestors of the Dutch royal house.

    See Orange, House of

Orange3

adjective ˈɒrɪn(d)ʒ
  • Relating to the Orange Order.

    Orange marches
    Example sentencesExamples
    • North Belfast, in particular, has been simmering since clashes at Orange marches in July.
    • Trouble also broke out at the Orange parade in the seaside town of Ballycastle on the north Antrim coast.
    • A ruling is also due on the proposed Orange march at Drumcree next Sunday.
    • The opposition to Orange marches was the most significant example of this.
    • Acknowledging the Rangers fans, he briefly mimicked an Orange marcher piping on his flute.
    • Yesterday, at an Orange rally on Glasgow Green, McLellan was singled out for criticism.
    • Their songs soundtracked the Orange revolution in the country at the end of last year.
    • Yet the Orange state in Northern Ireland was by its very definition never democratic.
    • When the security services blocked the Orange march, confrontation and rioting ensued.
    • It is time that my church made a serious attempt to understand and to listen to and to love the Orange community in Scotland.

Derivatives

  • Orangeism

  • noun
    • The defeat of hardline Orangeism and Unionism over the parades issue has added to the disillusionment, anger and the sense of bewilderment within a section of the Protestant community.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • That includes the academic sympathisers with Orangeism.
      • This was unusual in that it is dedicated to the memory of the battle of the Somme in 1916 and carries no overt reference to Orangeism.
      • The truth is, Orangeism is dying a slow and convoluted death.
      • Since his sermon he has found himself acting as lightning rod for widespread discontent with the direction Orangeism has taken.
 
 

orange1

noun
  • 1A round juicy citrus fruit with a tough bright reddish-yellow rind.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Try also the top of a carrot, half an apple, half a green pepper (remove the seeds) and half an orange (not too juicy).
    • A little further down the coast we admire the rickety wooden fishermen's huts when a man in his seventies eating an orange starts chatting.
    • All in all, however, citrus covers the largest tonnage if you include oranges, grapefruit, lemons and smaller varietals such as naartjies.
    • The half-time whistle sounded and traditional sliced oranges were brought round on trays for fans wilting from the sticky heat.
    • On another day they would have been dead and buried by the time the oranges were passed round.
    • Slice each orange into 5mm rounds, trying to reserve as much juice as you can.
    • Cut the peel from the orange, slice the flesh thinly and serve at the side of each slice of cake.
    • This category included lemons, oranges, mandarins, tangelos, and grapefruits, with lemons being the most common type.
    • The Maschio Prime Arance, made from the juice and pulp of Italian oranges, is like biting into an orange with a kick.
    • Dried beans and legumes, oranges and orange juice, peanuts and leafy green vegetables all contain folate.
    • After turning it over, I then squeezed the juice of half each of an orange, lime and lemon on it.
    • These days, juicy, delicious oranges are practically synonymous with vitamin C.
    • When an orange is juiced, fibre and other health-giving elements are left behind.
    • Grate the rind from the two large oranges and squeeze out the juice.
    • Today being the feast day of St Clement, the fourth pope and patron saint of mariners and ironmongers, I have put oranges and lemons to good use in my mother's recipe for a whisky marmalade.
    • We walked from her back gate down the gravel path through the village center, where a lush community citrus orchard offered oranges and grapefruits.
    • There was a tree toward the front, its branches laden with big, bright oranges.
    • Squeeze the juice from all the oranges and the lime in with it and stir.
    • In fact the grapefruit is simply a hybrid between a pomelo and an orange.
    • For the last 20 years I've had the juice of four oranges for breakfast, using a classic manual squeezer, which I drink with toast and a cup of tea.
    1. 1.1British A drink made from or flavored with orange.
      a vodka and orange
      Example sentencesExamples
      • As I gulped down my pint of Bud, Tony washed down a pack of dry roasted with a diet coke and Debbie sipped at her vodka and orange.
      • Meanwhile, a vodka and orange, tequila or gin and tonic can all be had for a reasonable Rp 35,000.
      • ‘Until now, it has not been possible, for example, to market a drink containing both orange and cream,’ said Muir.
      • The student's friends thought it was likely that her drink, a vodka and orange, had been spiked either as she was at the bar or as she was walking across the dance floor, as it was a large, open glass.
      • In July she had spent the evening at a nearby pub when she had had several pints and a glass of vodka and orange.
      • Vodka and orange seemed more Norwood's type of drink.
      • Five minutes later he took off his hat, pulled a comb out of his pocket, dipped it in a glass of vodka and orange on the table, stood up and then combed his hair in the mirror over the fireplace.
      • After my second double vodka and orange in 15 minutes, I'm beginning to feel it.
      • Martin found he liked the strange new drink, but Jack wisely made his next drink orange and lemonade.
      • Dyer is putting on an exhibition of running around, sort of like a mini-Pete Sampras lookalike who's drunk too much fizzy orange.
      • Anyway it has been a hard drive there and back and I have a vodka and orange getting warm.
      • The danger lies in alcopops, which are flavoured with things like cranberry or orange to disguise the taste of vodka.
      • But before driving home from work, what harm could a quick pint, small glass of wine or harmless vodka and orange with a colleague cause?
      • ‘A passenger asked one trainee steward for a screwdriver - you know, vodka and orange,’ Duggal relates.
      • While all eyes were on the news channel, I was just happy to watch her move gracefully around the pub sipping her Vodka and orange.
      • Is it too late for a vodka and orange?
      • It was at this time that Crete made a run for the bar to claim his fifth vodka and orange.
  • 2The leathery-leaved evergreen tree that bears the orange, native to warm regions of South and Southeast Asia. Oranges are a major commercial crop in many warm regions of the world.

    Genus Citrus, family Rutaceae: several species, in particular the sweet orange (C. sinensis) and the Seville orange

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Zhaar or orange flower water is an extract of the Bergamot orange tree.
    • Lo and behold, our backyard came with an orange tree and a Meyer lemon tree.
    • I played with my brothers and sisters in a sprawling garden full of orange and lemon trees.
    • My neighbor politely said, ‘Uh, are you referring to the orange trees we have in our yards?’
    • Now the ancient passes have opened up and tourism, as well as the fertile land that supports oranges and avocados, is bringing some wealth to the region.
    • I do know that the soil they throw up has a lovely crumbly texture; it can be mixed with potting compost to make a heavier compost ideal for permanent pot plantings like bay trees, figs and oranges.
    • When he did end up in the right place, he could go and look from his windows to see orange trees, oleanders and a jacaranda across the lawns and below.
    • Morocco's plains are cultivated with a variety of crops, such as oranges, figs, olives, almonds, barley, and wheat.
    • Her romantic garden showcases David Austin roses, hydrangeas, camellias, orange trees and numerous perennial and annual plants.
    • Everywhere you turn there are almond, fig, lemon and orange trees and olive groves.
    • Terracotta pots overflow with cactuses and red, pink and purple flowers, above which spread expansive palms and orange and lemon trees.
    • They came to a connected room, full of oranges and palm trees.
    • Wheat, grapevines, almonds, olives, and oranges were planted from the beginning.
    • The view from the wooden deck is a mesh of banana, mango, orange, and momonchino trees.
    • Everything green is inside, so this is the image I've still got about my childhood in Morocco; just the houses with the orange trees, olive trees and the palm trees which were introduced from the south up to the city of Fez.
    1. 2.1 Used in names of other plants with fruit or flowers similar to the orange, e.g., mock orange.
  • 3A bright reddish-yellow color like that of the skin of a ripe orange.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Organic and earthy colours dominate with burnt orange, rust, sky blue and many shades of green.
    • I like the bright saturated orange of the bottles on the shelf.
    • At times, warm, undulating tones of pale pink, magenta, purple and orange hypnotically pulse through the cylinders.
    • They were normal, except that the irises were streaks of red, purple, orange, and pink; like a sunset.
    • Apart from just red, blue and green, there are various other colours, including orange, purple and yellow.
    • Chocolate brown, pink and orange are mixed with succulent berry shades and a field of soft greens.
    • Hot pink, vibrant orange, purple, turquoise and green of any shade were the colours of the day, with ladies strutting around like beautiful birds of paradise.
    • Plants with sunset colours of bright orange and crimson stand out and make an easy target for the eye.
    • We mean really bright colours like orange, yellow, red, and green.
    • Any colors composed of red or green, such as brown, purple or orange, don't look the same as they would to someone who sees all colors.
    • For those wanting something more bright, there are colours like orange, green, and lemon.
    • Stone arches, shelves of antique bottles, jars and jugs and the colour scheme of orange and terracotta give the place a rustic feel.
    • A wide range of colours was used - shades of gold, orange, green, brown and gray.
    • The sun was near the horizon and the sky was a bright mix of orange, pink, and purple.
    • Body colors include bright orange, pink, yellow, dark brown and even black.
    • Inside the veils, exotic plants with flowers of all colors: bright orange, reds, pinks, and yellows.
    • ‘We are the only school in the country that has orange as its primary colour,’ director of athletics Jake Crouthamel outlined.
    • His penchant for bright colours - orange and yellow are favourites - only add to his reputation for excitement and flamboyance.
    • We also changed the colors from brown to bright orange, which gives a higher energy feeling.
    • The clouds in the sky were bright with pastel colors of red, orange, purple, pink, and blue.
adjective
  • Reddish yellow.

    there was an orange glow in the sky
    Example sentencesExamples
    • He looked down at her light, yellow and orange skirt.
    • Its creamy yellow to deep orange flowers glow like sunshine even on the darkest day until the frost finally kills them at the end of the year.
    • The sun was setting in the distance giving the evening an orange and yellow glow.
    • There were sunshine yellow trains, orange trains, blue ones and green.
    • Yellow or orange flame means one is wasting gas.
    • The roof is a reddish orange color, the walls washed-out gold, and all trimmed in wood a shade or two darker than the roof.
    • Looking resplendent in a raw silk orange dress, 28-year-old Norma O'Donoghue was the unanimous choice of the judges.
    • The city was gorgeous during the fall, the yellow and orange leaves really giving the streets a special glow.
    • The lizard had a skinny red body, with a yellow underside and orange nails.
    • He was wearing a polo shirt with white, red, yellow and orange hoops, the white hoops being thicker than the rest.
    • Made from bright orange, green or pink wool-covered foam, the seat perches upon thin steel legs.
    • Beta-carotene is a nutrient found in yellow and orange vegetables and fruit that can be converted to vitamin A in the body.
    • His wings were orange and striped with white on the undersides.
    • Those once ubiquitous garish yellow and orange ski suits are now quite rare and look dated.
    • The orange bag had two yellow folders, one black folder with stars and swirls, and one Mickey Mouse folder.
    • Not sure if I'm going to have to get a bouffant hairstyle and start wearing orange foundation.
    • Its delicate, red, yellow and orange tubular flowers are quite striking but I am not sure how well the plants will grow in our cooler climate.
    • Geoff Sowden, of Haxby, contacted the Evening Press when he noticed the distinctive orange and black butterflies filling his garden every morning.
    • The very thought of orange skies and yellow sand hurt her head.
    • Red, yellow and orange peppers are sweet and less spicy.

Origin

Late Middle English: from Old French orenge (in the phrase pomme d'orenge), based on Arabic nāranj, from Persian nārang.

Orange2

proper nounôˈräNZH
  • 1A town in southern France, on the Rhône River, home of the ancestors of the Dutch royal house.

    See Orange, House of
  • 2A city in southwestern California, southeast of Los Angeles in an agricultural area; population 136,392 (est. 2008).

Orange3

adjective
  • Relating to the Orange Order.

    Orange marches
    Example sentencesExamples
    • When the security services blocked the Orange march, confrontation and rioting ensued.
    • Trouble also broke out at the Orange parade in the seaside town of Ballycastle on the north Antrim coast.
    • It is time that my church made a serious attempt to understand and to listen to and to love the Orange community in Scotland.
    • Yesterday, at an Orange rally on Glasgow Green, McLellan was singled out for criticism.
    • Their songs soundtracked the Orange revolution in the country at the end of last year.
    • Yet the Orange state in Northern Ireland was by its very definition never democratic.
    • A ruling is also due on the proposed Orange march at Drumcree next Sunday.
    • Acknowledging the Rangers fans, he briefly mimicked an Orange marcher piping on his flute.
    • North Belfast, in particular, has been simmering since clashes at Orange marches in July.
    • The opposition to Orange marches was the most significant example of this.
 
 
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