All your female kittens will be ginger mottled with another colour (depending on the genetic makeup of both cats, this colour can be anything besides white). If the ginger parent is the tom, all your male kittens will be any colour besides ginger and white, and if the ginger parent is the mother, all your male kittens will be ginger. From this I have given you an easy way to tell the sexes apart, by looking at their fur colours.
It depends because a ginger tom and a black and white mixed breed bred and one of the kittens was grey with ginger splodges. You may get another white cat or brown cat or a white cat with brown splodges.
Probably any tint or shade of grey.
They could be white, grey, white and grey, or many other things. It is all about genetics. There could be a recessive gene in there for dark fur, so you might end up with a black kitten, or some other random color. Most likely you will get a white, grey or mixed white and grey kitten.
Not sure on which breed but she's Fleabitten grey in colour.
The kittens might be a mix of both colours or just grey tabby or just red tabby. You also might get one that is white with red tabby and grey, it's the cutest thing ever (:
There are no 'breeds' of chinchilla, but the most common colour is a standard grey
any color, they could come out brown.(:
They are the cuttest kittens on earth.
Grey is a colour not a breed..so can be any height of pony upto 14.2 hands.. or over that height for a horse!
You can't tell the breed by looking at the colour of a cat. It could be a range of breeds, or most likely a mixed-breed.
It can be mant colours;yellowey black (a mustardey colour)black (jet balck and grey)brown (like a ginger and a dark)...erm thats it really...
grey is not a colour, it is a neutral