It depends on the color pattern. If the black and 'grey' spots are randomly distributed, you can be describing a 'Blue' merle, and depending on the white, it can be a blue merle with irish white, a blue merle with piebald white, or blue merle with residual white.
If the grey is confined to the face, paws, or barly brushes the back, it could just be a very old black and white dog.
If the black,white and grey areas seem well defined, it is usually still considered a bi-colored dog (black and white) with 'bleaching' or diluting.
If the dog's back is mostly black, fades to grey along the sides, and is white along the belly, then the dog has either agouti or sable. This type of coloration is often called 'Wolf-grey', as it resembles a typical grey-wolf coloration.
gray, white, or black. dogs are colorblind.
Black, white and gray are neutral colors because they have no hue.
white, black, and gray
No, Newfoundlands can be black, brown, gray or black and white. however if you see a dog that you believe to be a Newfoundland except that the animal is entirely white, that breed is called a Great Pyrenees.
they do not see color their like dogs they can see black white and gray
There is something called gray hair as there is both black , white and that hair in between black and white is seen as gray hair.
When you mix black and white paint, you get gray.
To mix gray, you can combine black and white. The more black you add, the darker the gray will be; and the more white you add, the lighter the gray will be.
actually all cats and dogs are color blind. they only see black and white
No, because dogs see in black & white. Dogs do see in pastel colors of blues, yellow, gray.
It means no colours are present. Like "black and white" tv isn't just black and white there are a whole host of grays in between. The spectrum of gray shades is called Gray Scale
Dogs walk on four legs and have tails of varying lengths. Dogs' hair can be brown, white, black, gray, or yellowish.