Y'Tin, Tomas, Y'siu, Y'juen
A gray level image is an image that contains only shades of gray (if it is a RGB image, than all its pixels satisfy R=G=B)
Black and white even though these are not colors at all they're actually shades.
Green, light brown, silver, turquoise, pink.
I am not sure if this is an all inclusive list but here is the list I found: A Million Shades of Gray (2010) Outside Beauty (2008) Cracker: The Best Dog in Vietnam (2007) Weedflower (2006) Kira-Kira (2004) The Glass Mountains (2001) The Heart of the Valley of Love (1997) The Floating World (1993)
a-butter b-fifty shades of gray c-hopscotch d-all of the above (best answer)
yes, by a million miles
The colors in an MRI are ALL false - the computer generates them from shades of gray.
When all saturation is removed from an image, the colors become grayscale, resulting in a black and white image. This means that all colors are converted to their corresponding shades of gray, with no distinction between different hues.
The combination of three primary colours Red, Green and Blue (RGB) can display all the colours depending on the intensity of each component. Varying the intensities of these three primary colours, the RGB monitor displays different shades. For example: White can be achieved by mixing all three in highest possible intensity. Similarly Black is shown by making the intensity of all three colours equal to zero. If the intensities of all three colours are same at any instant, then we get shades of gray.
All the shades of blue
There are too many shades of blue to list. Some dark shades are navy, teal, and cobalt. Some light shades are baby blue and turquoise.
When you mix all the secondary colors (orange, green, and purple) together, you would theoretically create a muddy brown or gray color, depending on the specific shades of the secondary colors used.