No.
As you may know, the three primary colours (red, yellow and blue) cannot be made. But that is the same rule for white and black.
Red and blue make purple, so red and cyan may too.
White, as Cyan in blue and green, add red you then have all three colours hence white.
When red is removed from the white light, which is the color cyan you remain with Bluish-green color.
Any light that does not contain the primary color red will make the sheet of paper look black. (for example green, blue, cyan,... but not yellow, violet,...) This is because the surface of the sheet is such that it absorbs all the colors of white light except red which is reflected and which is why it appears red in white light.
Mixing cyan and red in the light spectrum will produce white light. Cyan is a combination of blue and green, and when mixed with red (which is opposite of cyan on the color wheel), the three primary colors of light—red, green, and blue—combine to create white light.
yellow,purple,red,white,cyan,orange,and green
If the light source is truly cyan, the red object should appear black. The object is red because it reflects the red portion of the white light spectrum. With no red wavelengths available to be reflected, the object will have a lack of color (i.e., black).
Magenta is created when cyan and red light are mixed together. This is because magenta is a secondary color that is produced when two primary colors (cyan + red) are combined.
When red and cyan light overlap, they produce white light due to their complementary colors combining.
The white object will appear red because all colors of light are absorbed by the object except for red and cyan. The red light is reflected to our eyes, resulting in the object appearing red.
Probably Magenta
black
It would make black