Because a colour scheme or colourway can include more than one colour, and the same product can be offered in multiple schemes/ways which include any given colour. If I offer a bike in metallic red fade with silver stars, or matte red with black bands, “colour” doesn’t really cut it.
So different colours and a picture would suffice then. I’m from Yorkshire, you can keep your fancy ways. Thing comes in different colours and colour combinations. Colourway sounds like a 50’s racist bike path in the Deep South
Colorway is an American English phrase so it has no ‘u’.
Must have changed the rules so that one word can now be considered to be a phrase .
That’s not a change. From Wikipedia (yeah, I know…)
“In linguistic analysis, a phrase is a group of words (or possibly a single word) that functions as a constituent in the syntax of a sentence, a single unit within a grammatical hierarchy.”
The term “noun phrase”, for instance, is the generic term commonly used to refer to any group of words acting as a noun. So in the sentence “I hate the evolution of language” there are two noun phrases: “I” and “the evolution of language”; the point being that noun phrases are grammatically interchangeable, so you could replace “the evolution of language” with a single-word phrase such as “progress”.
😉
