Question:

On listening to the confession of love she blushed until she was purple.

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When describing emotional reactions like blushing, choose colour expressions that match natural human physiology — red, crimson, scarlet — not unrealistic shades.
Updated On: Aug 14, 2025
  • On listening
  • to the confession
  • of love she blushed
  • until she was purple
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The Correct Option is D

Solution and Explanation

The phrase "until she was purple" is incorrect in standard English expression for describing blushing.
When someone blushes, their face typically turns red, not purple. Using "purple" here is inappropriate and can even create a humorous or unintended image.
The correct idiomatic expression would be "until she was red" or "until her face turned red". In more formal writing, "she blushed deeply" or "her cheeks turned crimson" are also appropriate.
Why the other options are correct:
- Option (A) "On listening" — correct use of the preposition "on" + present participle to indicate that the action happened after hearing something.
- Option (B) "to the confession" — grammatically correct and fits the meaning.
- Option (C) "of love she blushed" — correctly links the confession to the act of blushing, though a comma after "love" could improve clarity.
Common mistake here: Using incorrect colour descriptors in idiomatic contexts. "Purple" could be used in expressions like "beaten until he was purple" (describing bruising), but not for blushing.
Corrected sentence: "On listening to the confession of love, she blushed until she was red."
Real-life examples: - "She blushed until her face turned crimson."
- "On hearing his name, she blushed deeply."
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