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Crayola

American  
[krey-oh-luh] / kreɪˈoʊ lə /
Trademark.
  1. a brand of wax crayon, usually sold in assortments of bright colors.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Crayola has called the area home since the early 1900s, when it first started producing crayons.

From The Wall Street Journal

It has 65 showrooms and is so far home to such brands as Crayola, Funko and Hasbro.

From Los Angeles Times

"He'd got some of the 'blood' on his fingers and it was like a Crayola marker had burst on his hands. It was that sort of texture and colour. He wasn't happy about it either."

From BBC

In “Fantasmas,” from Julio Torres, odd threads involving the search for a lost earring, a worrisome birthmark and his quest to acquire “proof of existence” weave through odder diversions — a clear Crayola, dresses for toilets, a nightclub for gay hamsters, a call center staffed by mermaids, an abusive executive goldfish.

From Los Angeles Times

In an early scene Torres, playing a version of himself, pitches Crayola executives on a crayon for “the color clear,” which he suggests naming after the Spanish word for “ghosts.”

From New York Times