Yes. Blue is a primary and green is a secondary and they make yellow. also orange and yellow make purple
Blue is one of the three primary colours. The compliment to ant primary colour is the colour achieved by mixing the two remaining primary colours. In this case the complimentary colour to blue is the secondary colour orange.
Blue, Red, yellow are the three primary colours, and can't be created by mixing colours together.
Secondary school mathematics consists of mathematics typically taught in middle schools (a.k.a., junior high schools) and high schools (or secondary schools) — that is, roughly ages 11–17. It is preceded by primary school mathematics and followed by university level mathematics.
well i was interested in the same question and finally found the answer!!It's Primary,Secondary,Tertiary,and!! "quaternary"Oh and your welcome;-)...and then I found: The sequence continues with quaternary, quinary, senary, septenary, octonary, nonary, denary. Words also exist for `twelfth order' (duodenary) and `twentieth order' (vigenary).
thyre both not
Primary Means, it is individual there is no dependence, But Secondary will allays depends on Primary, If you want to do Secondary, you should complete primary first, There is no precondition to primary, but for Secondary Primary is the Precondition, first you should do primary, then only you are able to do secondary.
primary and secondary demand
Voltage on primary/Primary turns = Voltage on secondary/Secondary turns
primary and secondary coilsAnswerPrimary and secondary windings.
Primary is IgM and secondary is IgG
secondary
Secondary
The current in the secondary when the voltage is twice the primary will be one half of the primary. The current in the primary when the voltage is twice the secondary will be twice the secondary.
The turns ratio of Primary / Secondary tells you have the voltage and current will be changed. The secondary current will be (primary turns/secondary turns) times the primary current, and the secondary voltage will be (secondary turns / primary turns) times the primary voltage.CommentThe above answer is a little misleading, because the secondary current is determined by the load, and not by the transformer's ratio. It would, therefore, be more accurate to say that the primary current would be equal to the secondary current times the (primary turns/secondary turns) -i.e. not the other way around!
You cannot. You have a primary and a secondary. You have to have a secondary.
Secondary consumers - primary consumers are the herbivores