White tigers are white not purple. They can only be purple if they are painted or covered in a purple material.
It's not purple that lilacs come in. Violet is the only color it can come in.
There is no such thing as a purple dolphin? There are only grey, blue, pink & white. Dolphins are not purple.
Pine cones are only purple on a variety that has purple cones, so it is a trait of the variety.
Purple mixed with black makes a shade of purple. If only a little black is used it will be clearly identified as a shade. If only a little purple is used, it will seem to be almost black.
Purple used to be a royal colour, as Jesus claimed to be the king of the Jews they made him where the purple cloak as only kings and queens where only aloud to where purple as Jesus claimed to be a king they made him where a purple cloak to mock him
Only Ritchie and Deep Purple can answer this.
you cannot, you can only get purple from mixing red and blue
you cannot, you can only get purple from mixing red and blue
Only in your imagination!
No.
The Romans had no colors with a particular meaning except for the color purple. The senators and aristocrats wore a purple stripe on their tunic and toga. However this Roman "purple" was more like a red-violet, not a deep purple. The imperial purple was a true purple, a Tyrian purple. It, by law, was only worn by emperors and triumphing generals.The Romans had no colors with a particular meaning except for the color purple. The senators and aristocrats wore a purple stripe on their tunic and toga. However this Roman "purple" was more like a red-violet, not a deep purple. The imperial purple was a true purple, a Tyrian purple. It, by law, was only worn by emperors and triumphing generals.The Romans had no colors with a particular meaning except for the color purple. The senators and aristocrats wore a purple stripe on their tunic and toga. However this Roman "purple" was more like a red-violet, not a deep purple. The imperial purple was a true purple, a Tyrian purple. It, by law, was only worn by emperors and triumphing generals.The Romans had no colors with a particular meaning except for the color purple. The senators and aristocrats wore a purple stripe on their tunic and toga. However this Roman "purple" was more like a red-violet, not a deep purple. The imperial purple was a true purple, a Tyrian purple. It, by law, was only worn by emperors and triumphing generals.The Romans had no colors with a particular meaning except for the color purple. The senators and aristocrats wore a purple stripe on their tunic and toga. However this Roman "purple" was more like a red-violet, not a deep purple. The imperial purple was a true purple, a Tyrian purple. It, by law, was only worn by emperors and triumphing generals.The Romans had no colors with a particular meaning except for the color purple. The senators and aristocrats wore a purple stripe on their tunic and toga. However this Roman "purple" was more like a red-violet, not a deep purple. The imperial purple was a true purple, a Tyrian purple. It, by law, was only worn by emperors and triumphing generals.The Romans had no colors with a particular meaning except for the color purple. The senators and aristocrats wore a purple stripe on their tunic and toga. However this Roman "purple" was more like a red-violet, not a deep purple. The imperial purple was a true purple, a Tyrian purple. It, by law, was only worn by emperors and triumphing generals.The Romans had no colors with a particular meaning except for the color purple. The senators and aristocrats wore a purple stripe on their tunic and toga. However this Roman "purple" was more like a red-violet, not a deep purple. The imperial purple was a true purple, a Tyrian purple. It, by law, was only worn by emperors and triumphing generals.The Romans had no colors with a particular meaning except for the color purple. The senators and aristocrats wore a purple stripe on their tunic and toga. However this Roman "purple" was more like a red-violet, not a deep purple. The imperial purple was a true purple, a Tyrian purple. It, by law, was only worn by emperors and triumphing generals.