In Canada either version of the word "color" can be generally used and accepted. The most commonly used is colour which is the official spelling.
The same applies to the official Canadian English spellings for armour, labour, behaviour, flavour, favour, favourite, honour, harbour, rumour, saviour, and savour.
Because of the US influence, words like airplane, tire, and aluminum, and endings like -ize or -yze are used in the American way like "authorize" and "paralyze" instead of the British way "authorise" and paralyse."
Also words with words ending with 'L' are either doubled with suffixes (the UK way) while other words have a single 'L' that is doubled in US English.
Travel:
Traveling = Travelling
Traveled = Travelled
Cancel:
Canceled = Cancelled
Canceling = Cancelling
Enroll = Enrol, Enrolment, Enrolling
Fulfill = Fulfil, Fulfilment, Fulfilling
For a website with all the British, Canadian, and American spellings, see the related link listed below.
Colour is the CORRECT spelling. "color" is just the American term which the rest of the world doesn't use.
It depends what country you are in. Example. Australia spells it with a "U" and the USA doesnt. To find the exact spelling, or correct spelling I think we have to go back to where the "queens" English began
Those employing the British/Australian protocol use MULTICOLOURED, while those using the American spelling use MULTICOLORED.
The preferred spelling is "colour," from the French "couleur." Unfortunately, the bastardized US spelling "color" is becoming all too popular.
Color is spelled correctly.
colour
flavour
"Favourite".
That is the correct US spelling of "gray matter" (brain tissue). The predominant UK and Canadian spelling of the color is "grey."
The US spelling is meter. The French spelling used in Canada is metre.
It's spelled Vacuum. This is the American spelling like "color" instead of the British "Colour". Another spelling is Vacume (Canadian) There is not always one way to spell words as many have been co-opted by cultures like American. As we speak English I would go with the British spelling. Vacuum.
In Canada, the spelling of color is colour, as in the UK and Australia.
The British way of spelling color, is 'colour'
"Favourite".
That is the Canadian spelling.
That is the correct US spelling of "gray matter" (brain tissue). The predominant UK and Canadian spelling of the color is "grey."
The US spelling is meter. The French spelling used in Canada is metre.
Color is the American way of saying the word while colour is the UK/Canadian way of saying the word.
It's spelled Vacuum. This is the American spelling like "color" instead of the British "Colour". Another spelling is Vacume (Canadian) There is not always one way to spell words as many have been co-opted by cultures like American. As we speak English I would go with the British spelling. Vacuum.
In Canada, the spelling of color is colour, as in the UK and Australia.
People or things from Canada are "Canadian". (The French / Canadian spelling is Canadien.)
they are both right just different if you are American or Canadian . Not quite: "fibre" is the U.K. spelling (The Queen's English), which is the accepted Canadian spelling--but the Prairie provinces prefer "fiber".
The British spelling is colour. The American spelling is color. (And my American spell checker is objecting to "colour".)
The American spelling is color.