i would say a light brown to dark blonde :) !
A pool can turn blond hair green due to the presence of copper particles in the water. When copper oxidizes, it can bind to the protein in hair and create a green tint. Additionally, chlorine in the pool can also react with hair, especially blond hair, contributing to the green color.
There are no flamingos that are naturally green.
They contain chloroplasts which are green in colour.
A palisade cell's sap vacuole is usually colorless or pale and its cytoplasm is typically transparent or slightly green due to the presence of chloroplasts.
The bubble bath has a dye added to it called Bromocresol Green which is a pH indicator, it will change colour as you change the pH of the bathwater - how acid or alkali the solution is. (Interestingly the one colour it never goes is green!)So as you dilute the bubble bath, which starts off slightly acid, the pH then gets higher and the water becomes more alkaline, making the Bromocresol Green change from orange to blue. If the water becomes acid again it will change from blue back to orange.
brown strait hair
It was originally black but she dyed it blond
A pale-ish, slightly squashed pea green colour. Nothing amazing unfortunately.
A vey light yellow green or slightly murky yellow.
Usually they are referring to the colour of the rosemary plant's leaves, a slightly greyed green.
Her eyes are naturally hazel/green....with a touch of brown They're forest green, they're light green with brown around the pupil (central heterochromia) but their true colour is green
Trees in general are naturally green. Santa could be any colour he fancies, and was indeed green or blue in early illustrations.
Technically, green would have been one of the first colours to appear, as it is in chlorophyll. There really was no "invention" involved, as green is a naturally occurring colour.
Well it definitely won't have bleach blond hair so i don't know why you didn't ask the question using the real hair colour because no one knows what colour it was. It is like asking if the child would have your new nose after you have had a nose job.
Australia is a country and, as such, does not have a favourite colour. The official colours of Australia are green and gold.
Clare MK eyes are a hazely green colour. Just like her hair,however her hair has pretty blond streaks!
There are dominant and recessive genes- according to popular theory, a brown/blond pair of alleles will have a dominant brown allele, but a recessive blond allele- dominant meaning: a person with a brown/blond allele or brown/brown allele will turn out brown, a person with blond/blond allele will turn out blond.Since both parents in this case are blond, they'd technically have a blond child as there is no dominant gene interfering. BUT if they were both brunettes, they could still have a blond child.Red hair is different- see "Genetics" at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hair_color Depending on the genetics of the mother and father themselves, the child will either have blue eyes if the green-eyed parent has a blue-eyed parent (probably, not 100% of course) and green eyes if the green-eyed parent has 100% green genes so to speak. See: http://www.athro.com/evo/inherit.htmlEye colour is not fully mapped out so it's more a game of probabilities.