Brown
white
Probably Magenta
What they've always taught in school was: the primary triad is red, blue and yellow the secondary triad is orange (red plus yellow), purple (red plus blue) and green (blue plus yellow). In reality, the primary colors are NOT red, blue and yellow. They are cyan, magenta and yellow. If you use these colors as your primaries, the secondary triad is red (magenta plus yellow), green (cyan plus yellow) and blue (cyan plus magenta). Red, green and blue are also the primary colors of light, which gives further credence to the fact cyan, magenta and yellow are the primaries--cyan absorbs red light, magenta absorbs green light and yellow absorbs blue light. And finally, I can almost guarantee your printer (assuming it's color) does NOT have red or blue ink in it, but it does have cyan and magenta ink.
blue.
yellow, magenta and cyan
The primary colors of pigment are yellow, magenta, and cyan.
cyan
BLUE Yellow and Magenta = Orange Yellow and Cyan = Green 100% cyan + 100% magenta create a nice dark blue. As you shift toward a cyan-heavy mix, you go more toward the robins-egg blue. More magenta than cyan creates a nice purple. Try these mixes: 100C/44M--a very pretty blue 70C/100M--a nice vibrant purple
White light minus magenta light would appear cyan in color. Cyan is the complementary color to magenta, so when magenta light is subtracted from white light, the remaining color is cyan.
red, blue, yellow No. Printing: yellow, cyan, magenta, plus black to make solid blacks. Televison: red, green, blue.
That's what they taught you in elementary school, but it simply doesn't work. You will get at best a dull or dark purple. Magenta and cyan make purple when mixed in the right proportions. More magenta than cyan is needed. Paints labeled with these names are hard to come by, and especially with magenta there are a lot of variations. Cyan is known in paint as phthalo blue.
Mixing magenta and cyan together will produce blue. Magenta is a combination of red and blue, while cyan is a combination of blue and green. When mixed, the blue components overlap, producing a shade of blue.