monochromatism
monochromatism
Daltonism is commonly known as color blindness.
The term for people who can see some colors but not others is "color vision deficiency," commonly known as color blindness.
Color-deficient vision, commonly known as color blindness, is most often caused by a genetic defect in the cone cells of the retina in the eye. This defect affects the ability to perceive certain colors or shades. The most common form of color blindness is red-green color deficiency.
Otalgia
pruritis.
singultus
You are describing the eye disease known as glaucoma.
He is color blind and he named color blindness of red, blue, purple, and yellow. he named it daltonisum.
Color blindness is genetic and so is present at birth. There are three types of color-blindness, also known as color vision defect. The first is red-green color blindness and is the most common. The second is blue-yellow and the third is complete lack of color vision. For each type of color blindness, rather than seeing the colors as they are, one would see varying degrees of intensity of the particular color, or not see the color at all, resulting in shades of brown or grey. The gene for color blindness is carried on the X chromosome, therefore more males than females are affected.
halitosis
dyslexia