Blue wiki:
>For other uses, see Blue (disambiguation) 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. Blue is the complement of yellow. For this reason, blue 80A filters are used to correct for the excessive redness of tungsten lighting in color photography.Many languages do not have separate terms for blue and green, and in the Swedish language, blå, the modern word for blue, was used to describe black until the early 20th century. 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" is blae, from the Middle English bla ("dark blue", from the Old English blæd).
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Art wiki:
[hree-letter%20acronym">three-letter acronym that can mean:Adaptive resonance theoryAdvanced Rapid Transit metro technologyassisted reproductive technologyAnaheim Resort TransitIATA airport code for Watertown International AirportISO 639 alpha-3 code for otherwise unassigned artificial languagesThe National Rail code for Arrochar and Tarbet railway station, United Kingdom. External links: ; ; . Antiretroviral therapy. It is used in the treatment of HIV infection.
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Feather wiki:
[hers are one of the epidermal growths that form the distinctive outer covering, or plumage, on birds. They are the outstanding characteristic that distinguishes the Class Aves from all other living groups. Other Theropoda also had feathers (see Feathered dinosaurs).
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