Want this question answered?
It is value!
Shade, as in "What shade of red is it?".
accuracy
vector
kinematics
Pastel.
It is value!
Shade, as in "What shade of red is it?".
Value refers to a color's lightness or darkness as compared to white or black
The answer is "weight"
It was a person it was a term ". Darkness is cheap, and Scrooge liked it"
"Opaque" and "transparent" refer to the amount of light that passes through the colour, not the colour itself. "Opaque" is a term used to describe any solid colour that light does not pass through. If you put an opaque colour it over another colour you will not see the colour below through it. "Transparent" is a term used to describe any colour that light passes through in any of many varying degrees. If you paint a transparent colour over another colour, you will be able, to some degree, to see the colour(s) and the ground (paper, canvas, whatever you are painting on) through the top coat.
'Better' is a judgement call and you are the judge. Champagne is one of the terms used to describe a diamond, which with its colour range fits into the diamond colour brown. Chocolate is another term used to describe a shade of a brown diamond.
"White darkness" is a term that can be interpreted in different ways depending on the context. It could describe a paradoxical situation where something that is typically associated with light (white) is also connected with darkness, creating a sense of confusion or contradiction. It can also be used metaphorically to convey a sense of ambiguity or complexity in a situation.
The term H-I when used to describe a diamond refers to its 'white' colour. In this colour grade, D is the 'whitest' and H-I does show a bit of yellow in the colour. Only a gemologist would truly be able to tell the difference between a diamond of D colour and one of H-i colour with the naked eye and without anything else to compare it to.
In Sanskrit Gu, darkness/denseness/obscuration, and Ru, light/lightness/radiance; literally a preceptor who facilitates a shift in consciousness. It also means "teacher" or "guide" in the religious sense.
The term used to describe the right to vote is suffrage.