No- it is a neutral color like white.
Complementary colors do neutralize when combined. When you mix two colors across the color wheel they mix to make brown. It is difficult to determine which two complementary colors make up a very even brown.
The color brown occurs when the 3 primary colors overlap. Color theory teaches that mixing a primary color and its complementary secondary color will make brown. This works because the complementary secondary color contains the other two primary colors.
Any two pigments that combine to make black
Primary colors can make all other secondary colors, on a huge quantity of tonalities, by adding white or black, and by varying the amounts of each primary color used to make complementary colors.
A split complementary color set is three colors that are opposite each other on the color wheel, specifically the main color is on one side and the other two secondary colors are on another side so lines between the colors make an isoceles triangle.
Complementary colors are pairs of colors that are opposite each other on the color wheel. When placed next to each other, they create strong contrast and make each other appear more vibrant. Examples of complementary colors include red and green, blue and orange, and yellow and purple.
Let's start with what colors have complements red and green blue and orange yellow and purple one of the colors in the pairs is a primary (where no colors can be mixed to make that color) and the other color is a secondary that cannot be made by two other primary colors that are not of its complement (green is made of blue and yellow while it's complement is red) if you mix any two complementary colors, it will make brown. However, since brown is made of a primary (red, blue, or yellow) and a secondary (green, orange, or purple) color it doesn't have a complement because it isn't a primary nor a secondary color. Black is made of equal parts of all three primary colors while white is no color. I don't think they are considered complementary colors, but the fact that brown has no complement, they answer to the question would be no. Not every color has a complement.
Take one set of complementary colors; say blue and orange. For a single split-complementary you would use orange and the two colors adjacent to blue, but not blue (green-blue and violet-blue). To make a double split-complementary use the four colors adjacent to the original complementary pair. The colors you would use are green-blue, violet-blue, yellow-orange, and red-orange. THIS IS NOT THE SAME AS A TETRADIC COLOR SCHEME WHICH USES TWO SETS OF COMPLEMENTARY COLORS.
All colors in the color spectrum make white. Black is the absence of color/light
All of them. The combination of all saturated colors is black.
False
You don't. Use black to adjust the shade of a color. Use white to adjust the tint of a color. You can make black with equal amounts of magenta, yellow, and cyan. That's how my color printer does it. The traditional primaries make brown instead of black, because they must be leaky to make any kind of green or violet. The traditional complements make brown because they are not truly complementary, but lean toward orange or yellow.