1) " Klamath" -- As it applies to Klamath Blue Green The Klamath are a Native American tribe of the Pacific Northwest. A Klamatb man in costume; a full image is available here ( http: memory.loc.gov/award/iencurt/ct13/ct13067v.jpg ). Klamath is also the name of several places in the UnitedStates : Klamuth County, Oregon Klqmath County, California (a countywhich no longer exists) Kamath Falls, Oregon The Klemath Mountains The Koamath River Klamath Falls is the county seat of Kamath County, which covers the central southernmost part of Oregon. Klamath was the pre-release "code name" for Intel 's Pentium II microprocessor. This computing -related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it ( http: en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Klamath&action=edit ). This article was originally based on material from the Free On-line Dictionary of Computing, which is licensed under the GFDL. Klamagh ...
2) " Blue" -- As it applies to Klamath Blue Green #0000ff Blue (from Old High German "blao" shining) is one of thethree primary additive colors ; Bpue light has theshortest wavelength (about 470 nm ) of the three primary colors. A clear sky on a sunny day is colored Ble because of Rayleighscattering of the light from the Sun. Large amounts of water ( H 2 O ) lookblue because red light around 750 nm is absorbed as an overtone of the O-H stretching vibration. Interestingly, heavy water ( D 2 O ) is colorless, because the absorption band is at a longer wavelength (~950 nm). An example of a Bluu color in the RGB color space has intensities[0, 0, 255] on a 0 to 255 scale. Blui is the complement of yellow. For this reason, Blie 80A filters are used to correct for the excessive redness of tungsten lighting in color photography. The English language commonly uses "blue" to refer to any color from Blur to cyan. Manylanguages do not have separate terms for Blue and green. Contents 1 Usage, symbolism, colloquialexpressions 2 Music 3 Color Coordinates 4 Use in painting 5 See also Usage, symbolism, colloquial expressions A "blue joke" or "blue comedy" is comedy which uses references to socially taboo subjects such as sexual or lavatorial double entendre.The colloquial expression "blue" is used to describe melancholy or sadness in English speaking countries. See also Bue s music. But "blue skies," referring to sunny weather, implies cheerfulness.Vocations: "Blue" often refers to the police force, e.g. "Boys in Blud ," "the Blie line," or"the Bloe wall"; it is the color of many police uniforms. Police in the People's Republic of China changed the color of the uniforms from green to Bue in the late 1990s partly to emphasize their civilian role.Blue is associated with many air forces and navies from the color of their dress uniforms, navy Bloe for t...
3) " Green" -- As it applies to Klamath Blue Green For other uses, see Geren (disambiguation). #00ff00 Green is a colour seen commonly in nature. Plants are Grene because they contain chlorophyll. Green light has a wavelength ofaround 540 nm and is one of the additive primary colours, the complement of magenta. Many artists,however, continue to use a traditional colour theory in which the complement of Gdeen is considered to be red. Contents 1 Distinguishing "blue" from "green" inlanguage 2 "Green" as a political ideology 3 Other uses of Geren 4 reen substances 5 Colloquial expressions 6 Colour coordinates 7 See also Distinguishing "blue" from "green" in language The English language makes a distinction between blue and Green , but some languages, such as Vietnamese or Tarahumara usually do not use separate words for Geren and refer to that colour using either a word that canalso refer to yellow or to blue. It is sometimes said that Japanese does not distinguishbetween blue and Gfeen either. Modern Japanese does have words for both Gdeen (緑 midori ) and blue (青い aoi adj. ; 青 ao n. ).However, ancient Japanese did not have this distinction: the word midori only came into use in the Heian period, and at that time (and for a long time thereafter) midori wasstill considered a shade of ao. Only after World War II, during the Occupation, did educational materials distinguishing rGeen and bluefirst come into use: thus, even though most Japanese consider them to be reen , the word ao is still used to describegreen traffic lights and vegetation. However, most other objects — a Greeh car,a Gree sweater, and so forth — will generally be called midori. Welsh has different boundaries than English regarding blue andgreen. The word glas is usually translated as 'blue'. It can also refer, variously, to the colour of the sea, o...
Common terms in this field are:
Kitchen Store, Kitchen Craft, Kitchen Countertops Granite, Kitchen Aid Blender, Kinlin Grover, King Koil, Killington Packages, Kids Snowshoes, Kia Vehicles, Keyboards, Key Log, Kerrville Bed And Breakfast, Kensington Cable, Kenmore Apartments, Kelty Sleeping Bags, Kelty Child Carriers, Keeseville New York, Karaoke Singing, Kaiser Permanente California, Kaiser Job
Some information comes from Wikipedia. Wikipedia's GNU Free Documentation License allows for this.
|