Black, grey and white.
Photographs that are primarily monochromatic (black and white) with areas of full color, are usually called "selective color" or "spot color." An example would be a photo in which a flower is shown in color, while everything else has been converted to black and white.
some black and white and others are full of color.
Black and white are colors, but technically both can be the absence of color, or the total combination of colors. B&W television used shades of gray (although that might also qualify as a color). The term "color TV" means a "full spectrum of colors" rather than simply grays.
If you mean what type of color is black and white combined, it's gray. If you mean what type of color are each individually. White is technically the absence of all color and black is the presence of all color. This is in the subtractive color theory, which is used in talking about paints, inks, dyes, etc. If you are talking about light, white is the presence of the full color spectrum, and black is the total absence of all color.
Hamsters see in black in white because they do not have a cornia in there eyes. Do not put them in sunlight they will be blind. Color blind are hamsters.
Only a pure white white Maltese is pedigree. Tan color or any color added is mixed.
True full length? Probably "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs".
Isolated color in photographyi is an effect when a color object resides on a black and white image, such as a train in full color, with the grass, trees, tracks and other objects in monochrome.
American Black Bears have full color vision.
black
This is a very subjective question... but my views: Some of the very popular debates state that Black is NOT a color, as any color would reflect some wavelength of light, and thus creating the hue. Black absorbs the light completely, reflecting none of it. =Black is absence of color, thus not a color.= White, on the other hand, reflects the full spectrum of light, hence creating a white hue. =White is presence of all the colors, thus it is a color.= at risk of adding fuel to the fire it depends on use and context. generally white and black are considered shades or tones but in most art worlds a true color is a color that can not be made on its own and can be used with other true colors to develop the who visual range. as such "most" schools of art now recognise 5 primary colors. these colors being "red, yellow, blue, black and white"
there the same