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Naming convention The names of the colors in your design system must showcase their purpose. As you mightve noticed in the previous paragraph, we suggest naming the colors in design systems Primary, Secondary, and Tertiary instead of the usual name, such as green, blue, or red.
The Color Naming System (CNS) is a systematic notation for named colors for computer applications using English terms created by Berk et al. in 1982.
ing to this observation, basic color names can be organized into a coherent hierarchy around the universal focal colors black, white, red, green, yellow, and blue always appearing in this specific order across cultures.
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It seems that colours were first named by what they made people think or feel. The naming of the colours in each place usually followed the same order: black, white, red, green, yellow, and blue with others like brown, purple and pink coming at various times afterward.
In order from lowest frequency to highest, they are red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet.
The names of the colors in your design system must showcase their purpose. As you mightve noticed in the previous paragraph, we suggest naming the colors in design systems Primary, Secondary, and Tertiary instead of the usual name, such as green, blue, or red.
The 16 basic color names are: aqua, black, blue, fuchsia, gray, green, lime, maroon, navy, olive, purple, red, silver, teal, white, and yellow.
There are different approaches to naming colors in a design system. You can name colors using abstract names (e.g. #b9b9b9 - pigeon), actual names (e.g. #b9b9b9 - silver), numbers (e.g. #b9b9b9 - silver-1) or functional names (e.g. #b9b9b9 - silver-base). At UXPin, weve decided to go with the functional approach.

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