You can't describe it. The color pink is strictly visual - it is a light of varying wavelengths and frequencies. Just like you couldn't answer what pink sounds like; the color pink will always remain foreign to a blind person.
That is a beautiful question you have. Pink is the soft pillow you felt as a baby or the soothing voice of your mother. You could also describe pink using the sense of taste, such as bubble gum flavored ice cream.
I also think that is an excellent question. Pink is the way you feel when you love someone. Pink is the way you feel when you touch a flower in April. Pink is the way a lollipop tastes on the tip of your tongue.
The best way to allow a blind person to experience pink is through their sense of smell and touch. Let them smell a rose. Let them feel the petals on the rose, which are tender like a baby's hand.
Pink is a softer version of red.
close your eyes and face the sun
If the person was truly blind they would not recognize any change regardless of what they face.
or
if they want it described say its a warm color and that its a christmasy color
look im only 13 but that's my opinion
I can describe a color to a blind person when i let him imagine a thing that is associated with that color. i will let him touch it if it is tangible and explain to him the similar feeling regearding that color like if i can describe himn the color of red i will tell him that it expresses love,passion anger or violence.
You cannot describe color to a blind person if they have never seen any color at all.
because it represents as a masculine colour and not a feminine colour
Till them its Like win you fall in love and you get that warmer fuzzy filling that makes you fill good that is the color pink
A flurecent red maybe
People all over the world, even “primitive tribes in the jungle,” perceive the color spectrum as going from red (hot) to blue or violet (cold). Since pink is desaturated red, it's a little like “pink noise.” Or it's like “hot” at medium intensity, but mixed in with a random sample of all other temperatures.
You simply can't.
probably not <><><> First. communicate what SEEING is, then COLOR, then the color YELLOW. A comparison might be made to senses that the blind person has, such as hearing, taste, smell or touch.
You cannot. That is like describing love to a child. He has no comprehension of what green is.
The lonely old man at the park is color blind.
If this blind man was born blind, he has no image of what seeing could be like, and there is no way. If this blind man became blind later and remembers colors, you can describe it as a massive, concave half circle, where the outer part is red, and it fades to orange, then it fades to yellow, etc.
Color to a blind man or woman: * Color works on the eye the way sounds do on the ear. A light color is like a high pitched sound, a dark color is like a low pitched sound. Silence to a deaf man or woman: * Sound works on the ears the way color does on the eye. Loudness is like lots of bright, intense colors; silence is like darkness. Since color vibrates at specific rates this ferquency may help to describe what a color feels like to a blind person and the lack of any vibration may explain silince is like to a deaf person A color can be explained to a blind man by touch. For example, green could be an avacado, or something else with that texture. White could maybe be cotton balls or something else soft. Silence can be explained to a deaf man by hand gestures (obviously). For example, the deaf man could be in the middle of a "conversation" and all of a sudden the other person will just stop.
you can't predict that. it depends on what sex the offspring is. if it is a female, she could be color blind because her father is, but a male could be color blind either way. because color blindness is carried on the Y chromosome and not the X chromosome.
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).
A man can wear any color he chooses. Some boys think pink is feminine and are afraid to wear it.
it happened a long time ago when a man mixed red and white pink came out.
The man who invented the x-ray was color blind.
The phenotypic ratio will be 1:3.his son will be color blind.