Thai Colors Quiz All 14 Colors with Audio (Free Quiz)
There is a morning in Thailand — every morning, really, but the first one stays with you — when you walk out into a street that is already fully alive at seven o'clock and you are struck by the color. Not the individual colors of individual things, but the total chromatic intensity of the scene: saffron robes in a shaft of early light, flower garlands in orange and yellow hanging from spirit house brackets, a tuk-tuk in luminescent green threading between a wall mural and a cart of fruit so precisely arranged it looks artificial. Thailand is a highly visual country, and its color vocabulary is accordingly rich.
Colors matter practically in Thailand beyond aesthetics. They carry cultural weight — certain colors belong to certain days of the week, certain colors signal royalty or mourning or celebration. At markets, you cannot shop for clothing without color vocabulary. In temples, you will see color systems at work in ways that become legible once you know the words. And at any fruit stall, knowing whether the vendor is recommending the yellow or the green mangoes can change your entire afternoon.
This quiz teaches all fourteen essential Thai colors, the prefix system that makes them logical, and the cultural context that makes them meaningful.
The Color Prefix System — เธชี (sii)
Thai colors follow a simple and elegant pattern. The word สี (sii) means color. It appears before every color name as a prefix. Once you know this, the structure of Thai color vocabulary becomes immediately clear:
สี + color name = Thai color word
So: sii daeng (color + red = red), sii khaaw (color + white = white), sii dam (color + black = black). In practice, native speakers sometimes drop the sii prefix in casual speech — daeng alone means red, dam alone means black — but learning the full form with sii first makes the system transparent and memorable.
All 14 Essential Thai Colors
Example: มีสี สีแดง เนเธซเธก = Do you have it in red?
To ask what color it is: สีอะไร = What color is this?
Colors of the Days — Thai Color Calendar
One of the most fascinating cultural dimensions of Thai color vocabulary is the traditional assignment of a specific color to each day of the week. This system, rooted in Hindu-influenced Thai astrology, is still widely observed — many Thais wear their day's color every week, particularly on auspicious occasions or when they want good fortune to flow in their direction.
| Day | Thai Day Name | Color | Thai Color |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sunday | วันอาทิตย์ | Red | สีแดง |
| Monday | วันจันทร์ | Yellow/Cream | สีเหลือง |
| Tuesday | วันอังคาร | Pink | สีชมพู |
| Wednesday | วันพุธ | Green | สีเขียว |
| Thursday | วันพฤหัสบดี | Orange | สีส้ม |
| Friday | วันศุกร์ | Light Blue | สีฟ้า |
| Saturday | วันเสาร์ | Purple | สีม่วง |
King Bhumibol Adulyadej (Rama IX) was born on a Monday, which is why yellow became closely associated with royalist sentiment during his reign. Wearing yellow on Mondays remains a common act of respect in Thailand, and the tradition intensified following his passing in 2016.
Two Blues — An Important Distinction
Thai distinguishes two shades of blue that English speakers often collapse into one word:
สีฟ้า (sii fah — sky color): A bright, light blue like a clear sky. Think cerulean or sky blue. This is the blue of Friday in the day-color system.
สีน้ำเงิน (sii nam ngoen — water-silver color): A deeper, darker blue. Navy, cobalt, or royal blue. Nam ngoen literally means silver water, evoking the color of deep water reflecting silver light.
When shopping for clothing or describing objects, using the right blue matters. A vendor who hears sii fah will reach for something light and bright; sii nam ngoen suggests something darker and richer.
Gold and Silver — Beyond Decoration
สีทอง (sii thong — gold) and สีเงิน (sii ngoen — silver) are both practically important and culturally significant. Gold appears throughout Thai temples — on Buddha images, on decorative elements, on offerings. The word thong (gold) appears in many compound words beyond color: thong means both gold and the metal itself, and appears in phrases related to wealth, value, and ceremonial significance.
Ngoen means both silver (the color) and money in Thai. The word for money is also ngoen — a linguistic reminder that silver was once the currency of choice in the region. When someone says khao mii ngoen (they have money / silver), the historical and modern meanings are layered in the same word.
✅ Post 16 — Colors (you are here)
⬜ Post 17 — Body Parts in Thai
⬜ Post 18 — Thai Weather Words
⬜ Post 19 — Transport: Taxi, Tuk-tuk, BTS
⬜ Post 20 — Emergency Thai
Fourteen colors. Each one a word you will use every week in Thailand — at markets, at temples, in conversation. The quiz includes both color identification and color-in-context questions. ๐จ
๐จ How to Play
- 1See a color swatch + Thai word
- 2Press Listen to hear the color in Thai
- 3Choose the correct color name from 4 options
- 43 in a row earns a streak bonus!
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