A Grey Dog

Eater: Grey Dog Cafe Makes a Cameo in the ‘Broad City’ Premiere

TV’s brashest best friends in Broad City made their return last night for the fourth season, and it turns out, NYC cafe The Grey Dog played a starring guest role in the uniting friendship of Abbi and ...

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Understanding the difference between grey vs gray is essential for English learners. Although both words refer to the same color between black and white, their usage depends on regional preferences.

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Despite the American preference for gray, the spelling grey retains a healthy presence in a lot of cultural references known to Americans, appearing in brand names like Grey Poupon (mustard) and Grey Goose (vodka), both of which originated in France.

When no color is added, the color is "neutral grey", "achromatic grey", or simply "grey". Images consisting wholly of black, white and greys are called monochrome, black-and-white, or greyscale.

"Gray" and "grey" are both correct spellings of the word for the neutral or achromatic color—a color “without color" between black and white, like a cloud-covered sky, ashes, or lead.

GREY definition: 1. of the colour that is a mixture of black and white, the colour of rain clouds: 2. having hair…. Learn more.

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Learn the difference between Grey vs Gray in English with meanings and examples for learners. Understand both spellings quickly!

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From Middle English grey, from Old English grēġ (Anglian). The spelling grey reflects the Anglian vowel development, whereas the variant gray stems from the West Saxon form grǣġ (through Middle English gray).