Thursday, June 27, 2019

adjectives - If both gold and golden refer to "made of gold", how do I choose?


I always thought that if something is made of gold, it is a gold thing, if it looks like gold but might not be, it is golden. But looking in the dictionary, I can see I was wrong.


In the Cambridge dictionary, for both gold and golden it reads:



made of gold, or the colour of gold



For "golden" it reads in also:



made of gold




Example sentences for gold:



She always does her presents up beautifully in gold and silver paper.
She was wearing a gold Lurex top with a pink mini skirt.
There are a couple of fish with blue markings, and a few more with gold stripes down the side.




  1. I understand in those examples "gold" refers to the color but why it is not golden?

  2. How would the meaning change if I put "golden" there?


  3. How to tell which one should I use?




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