If it was someone who had previously had sight, easy.
If it was someone born blind, you could word it like this, "Imagine the thing that you are feeling in front of you absorbs certain kinds of light, - you've probably noticed light if you were in a bright place and the darkness you see lessens - if it absorbs all kinds of light, it appears blank, if it doesnt, it appears as darkness, of which you probably see. depending on the kinds of light it absorbs, it can become more or less blank without being only blank and black. It could seem like it is getting bigger, and having less detail, this is when it gets fuzzy." Like it?
You actually truthfully cannot explain a color to a blind person because it will only confuse him than help him. There are organizations that do help the blind with their technology for blind people.
It is legal so long as the person can pass their driving test. I have several color blind friends who drive.
No, not at all.
I think it's color blind...
The color? No. The emotion? Yes.
You can't
I believe the tip of a blind person's cane is RED.
Most color blind people function just fine.
I presume you mean 'a blind person'. Impossible to describe colours to a person who had been blind from birth.
If the parent went blind due to an accident or a birth defect (born blind) then no. But if the parent has a disease that caused them to go blind then it is possible to inherit that as a child.
If you tell a blind person that a particular object is red in color, the blind person may choose to believe you or not to believe you, based upon his or her experience of your general reliability in the past. I have a blind friend, whom I have known for decades, and if I tell him that something is red, he will believe me, because he knows that I would not lie to him.
probably not <><><> First. communicate what SEEING is, then COLOR, then the color YELLOW. A comparison might be made to senses that the blind person has, such as hearing, taste, smell or touch.