... weekend. Reply now or forever hold your PhD theses.
I think this particular phenomenon owes its existence to the order by which people found the names for colours. The first colours that got named were red, black, and white, hence why you'd find, for instance, a bunch of birds described as "red" when they aren't particularly red, and why old Greek stories like the Odyssey described the sea as "wine-dark". The word to describe the exact colour of, say, a red grouse probably wasn't around at the time (it's brown), and the word to describe the exact colour of the sea probably wasn't around or at least not universal either (blue??? Green???).
So the idea of fire as a red thing was probably something left over from very very long ago, considering fire was also from pretty long ago.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_term#Basic_color_terms here's a link to a summary of it I don't know how well it holds up, but it's the only theory I've heard of about this sort of thing.
Hmmmm. First off, I'm a tad wary of this theory, as far as its claim to reflect basic neurological or physiological constraints is concerned. The range of hues that our eyes and visual cortex are best suited to differentiate between are
greens, presumably to better filter orientation "land"marks out of foliage, so why would
red be the first actual color to get a name if the connection were that straightforward? (Note that I
am giving the linguists enough credit to not suspect a case of "oh, languages have a ton of 'yummyberry bush in spring (colored)' terms
before they get to 'red', the researchers just failed to recognize these as
color terms because they don't exist to that specifity in
their language".)
But back to "fire red", the Berlin-Kay theory specifically
denies its applicability there because "fire red" is not a
basic color term, and thus should only have evolved well
after "yellow" ...
I think it has to do with the nature of the fires when words were first coined. Fire was rarely the tame, shy and smokeless high-temperature thing as we know in the past. It's not like that in the nature.
I wonder how much of that "fire" red is actually radiation from
embers diffused by the smoke ... but yes, point taken.
Plus, bright yellow was reserved for the Sun.
At least English has a "
fire yellow" by now.
(German apparently has not, if you ignore a couple occurences where some marketing dpt. seems to have had a trendygasm.)
By the way, the explanation I was sorta
expecting would have been that "fire red" came into existence as a shortening of "the red color of a fire
engine". Yellow fire engines exist in English-speaking countries, but
never did (apart from
imports by transnational operators) in Germany, as far as I can tell. Matter of fact, to this day,
RAL 3000 "Feuerrot" is one of the colors specifically mentioned in our regulations for fire engines. (It is poorly suited as the backing color of
retroreflective surfaces, though, which IIUC helped the "liberalization" along.)
Wow, this is very interesting. In Russian word “red” also used to be the same word for “beautiful”.
... heh, that reminds me. At least in the German version, the parents of Snow White wished for (and got) a girl "so weiß wie Schnee, so rot wie Blut und so schwarz wie Ebenholz" (as white as snow, as red as blood and as black as ebony, supposedly referring to complexion, lips, and hair, in
that order, if you please
). I guess Berlin-Kay is something straight out of fairy tales ...