technicolor

Etymology
From.

Adjective

 * 1)  Extremely or excessively colourful.
 * 2)  Describing something in a technicolor model, a model that is similar to the Standard Model but lacks a scalar Higgs field.
 * 1)  Describing something in a technicolor model, a model that is similar to the Standard Model but lacks a scalar Higgs field.
 * 1)  Describing something in a technicolor model, a model that is similar to the Standard Model but lacks a scalar Higgs field.
 * 1)  Describing something in a technicolor model, a model that is similar to the Standard Model but lacks a scalar Higgs field.
 * 1)  Describing something in a technicolor model, a model that is similar to the Standard Model but lacks a scalar Higgs field.
 * 1)  Describing something in a technicolor model, a model that is similar to the Standard Model but lacks a scalar Higgs field.

Noun

 * 1)  A process of colour cinematography using synchronised monochrome films, each of a different colour, to produce a colour print.
 * 2)  Vivid colour.
 * 3)  A collection of theories based on quantum chromodynamics

Usage notes

 * Some use the British English spelling of colour to give, but this might be considered incorrect as the word comes from a trademark spelt without the "u".
 * Perhaps the most common use of this word is in the title of the popular musical  (1969).