Black

"Black" in Spanish

moreno

(relating to people with dark skin — see also dark-skinned link= A user suggests that this Translingual entry be cleaned up, giving the reason: “e.g. Dutch: neger (nl) m, negerin (nl) f and German: Schwarzer (de) m, Schwarze (de) f aren't translations of the adjective, but of the noun for which see below.” Please see the discussion on Requests for cleanup(+) for more information and remove this template after the problem has been dealt with.)

morocho

(relating to people with dark skin — see also dark-skinned link= A user suggests that this Translingual entry be cleaned up, giving the reason: “e.g. Dutch: neger (nl) m, negerin (nl) f and German: Schwarzer (de) m, Schwarze (de) f aren't translations of the adjective, but of the noun for which see below.” Please see the discussion on Requests for cleanup(+) for more information and remove this template after the problem has been dealt with.)

negro

(absorbing all light)

negro

(relating to people with dark skin — see also dark-skinned link= A user suggests that this Translingual entry be cleaned up, giving the reason: “e.g. Dutch: neger (nl) m, negerin (nl) f and German: Schwarzer (de) m, Schwarze (de) f aren't translations of the adjective, but of the noun for which see below.” Please see the discussion on Requests for cleanup(+) for more information and remove this template after the problem has been dealt with.)

negro

(of coffee or tea, without milk or other whitener)

oscuro

(without light)

charol

(dark-skinned person — see also Negro)

chombo (anglophone)

(dark-skinned person — see also Negro)

greno

(dark-skinned person — see also Negro)

moreno

(dark-skinned person — see also Negro)

negra

(dark-skinned person — see also Negro)

negro

(colour/color)

negro

(dark-skinned person — see also Negro)

Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.