Yes and no. some people are only color blind when certain colors meet for example: if you were black and yellow color blind a bee would only be one of the colors.
Yes. I don't have some super sciency answer, but they can be able to see certain colors if they are colorblind.
The other twin is unlikely to survive.
The probability is 0 (but the daughter will be a carrier of the color blind gene). This is because the gene dictating whether someone is color blind or not is linked to the X chromosome (and not the Y). The color blind gene is a recessive gene whilst the normal color vision gene is a dominant gene. Hence if a girl (XX) has one normal vision gene (from one parent) and one color blind gene (from the other parent), her normal vision gene will be dominant to the recessive color blind gene and hence she will have normal vision (but she will be a carrier of the color blind gene). If both her parents contribute the recessive color blind gene to her, then she will be color blind. For a woman (XX) to be color blind, she needs to be have both genes to be recessive (ie where there is no dominant normal color vision gene to dominate). For a man (XY), as long as the X gene contributed by his mother is a color blind gene, he will be color blind because he has no other X chromosome where a dominant normal color gene could reside. Hence, to answer the question, a man with normal color vision (XY, with a dominant normal color vision X gene since the gene can't be the recessive color blind gene otherwise he will be colorblind) and a colorblind woman (XX, both recessive color blind genes), will each contribute an X each the child. The man will contribute his only X chromosome which carries the normal color vision X gene and the woman can only contribute a recessive color blind gene. The man's normal color vision X gene will be dominant, and hence the daughter will definitely have normal vision (despite being a carrier).
Pig's Eye- it was named after Pierre Parrant, who was blind in one eye, so they gave him the nickname of Pig's Eye.
I think it's color blind...
In order to describe the color gray to a blind person, it would be beneficial to connect it with one of the other senses. It may described as: the sound of footsteps on concrete, the smell of rain, the smooth texture of stainless steel.
No, but it is possible
well OF COURSE! unless ur blind or color blind you always see colorActually, even if you're color blind, you still see colors. People who are color blind only can't see certain colors and get colors confused with one another. But yes, colors do exist.
If the mother is color blind, the son will be color blind. The daughter will only be color blind if the father is also color blind. As to if they will suffer from it, that depends on their self esteem and whether or not they choose to view themselves as a victim as their mother apparently does. It should be noted that although many people have color blindness, it is rare to actually suffer from it. One possible way that one might suffer is if s/he were attempting to disarm a bomb and could not tell what color the wires were.
Because one twin might be too shy and not like people but the other on loves to be the center of attention. Also, one twin might be too abnoxious and the other isn't.
It is called x-linked alleles. It is rare for a female to have color blindness because the allele must be passed from both parents. Males only need one allele to be color blind.With the equation, color blind female and non-color blind male reproduce. Each son has a 50% chance of developing the disorder.
There are several places one could take a color blind test. Websites that offer this test include Color Vision Testing, Toledo Bend, and Maniac World. One could also go an optometrist.
When one twin has a baby does the other one tend to have one as well* ofc not theyre two different people :/