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Now that is saying alot. The
funny thing is that blue just so happens to be my favorite
color. It goes good with sporting myspace online
too. I like all of the blues too.
Light, dark and even royal which kind of looks like purple.
With that being said it's not hard to see why these colored
glitter images are number one.
Blue is one of the three primary additive
colors; blue light has the shortest wavelength range (about
420–490 nanometers) of the three additive primary colors. The
English language commonly uses "blue" to refer to any color
from blue to cyan. An example of a blue color in the RGB color
space has intensities [0, 0, 255] on a 0 to 255
scale.
Information About Blue
The modern English word blue comes from the
Middle English, where it began to be used along with bleu, an
Old French word of Germanic origin (possibly Old High German
blao, "shining"). A Scots and Scottish English word for
"blue-grey" is blae, from the Middle English bla ("dark
blue," from the Old English blæd). As a curiosity, blue is
thought to be cognate with blond and black, also with Latin
flavus ("yellow"; see flavescent and flavine) and with
Russian áåëûé, belyi ("white," see beluga), all of which
derive (according to the American Heritage Dictionary) from
the Proto-Indo-European root *bhel- meaning "to shine, flash
or burn", whence the names of various bright colors, and that
of color black from a derivation meaning "burnt" (other words
derived from this root include bleach, bleak, blind, blank,
blush, blaze, flame, fulminate, flagrant and phlegm).
Myspace Glitter Graphics
Many languages do not have separate terms for
blue and green, instead using a cover term for both (when the
issue is discussed in linguistics, this cover term is
sometimes called grue in English). For example, in Vietnamese
both tree leaves and the sky are xanh (to distinguish, one
may use xanh lá cây "leaf grue" for green and xanh nước
"water grue" for blue). Chinese has a word 青 qīng that can
refer to both, though it also has separate words for blue (蓝
/ 藍, lán) and green (绿 / 綠, lǜ). In traditional Welsh (and
related Celtic languages), glas could refer to blue but also
to certain shades of green and grey; however, modern Welsh is
tending towards the 11-color Western scheme, restricting glas
to blue and using gwyrdd for green and llwyd for grey. In
Swedish, blå, the modern word for blue, was used to describe
black until the early 20th century.
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