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III.
Guess the words:
1)
retsc
2)
vewaletnhg
3)
shosptna
4)
icol
5)
adigrma
IV.
Read, translate and give the title to this article:
Light is,
in general, a mixture of wavelengths. As a result, light
wavelength or frequency are not sufficient to describe color. Color experts
call hue that aspect of color that matches most closely the change with
wavelength. But every color has two additional characteristics. For
example, any given
color can be bright or dark; brightness is a second,
independent property of color. A third independent property of color is its
saturation; it expresses how strongly a color differs from white. A strongly
saturated color is the opposite of a pale or weakly saturated color.
Human color space is three-dimensional. Humans are trichromatic.
Every color we see is described by three independent parameters, because
the human eye has three types of cones, thus three types of color-sensitive
cells. At least three parameters that can be varied.
A modern artist, Tauba
Auerbach, even produced a beautiful book version of the color space. The
number three is also the reason that every display has at least three different
types of pixels. These three parameters do not need to be hue, saturation and
brightness value. They can also be taken to be the intensities of red, green
and blue. Many other color properties can be used to describe color, such as
lightness, chroma, purity, luma and others. Also descriptions with four and
more parameters – which then are not independent from each other – are
used, especially in the printing industry.
Many birds, reptiles, fish and various insects have four-dimensional
color spaces
that include the ultraviolet; butterflies and pigeons have five-
dimensional color spaces, and other bird species have even higher-
dimensional color spaces. Mantis shrimps possibly have the
most complex
eyes in the animal kingdom, with up to twelve-dimensional color spaces. In
contrast to humans and apes, most mammals have only two-dimensional
color spaces. Also color-blind persons can have lower-dimensional color
spaces. In other terms, the number of dimensions of
the perceived color
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space is not a property of light, nor a property of nature, but a specific
property of our human eyes.
Colors in nature and colors perceived by humans differ. There is no
color space in nature. Colors in nature and colors in human perception differ
in an additional way, discovered by linguists.
In human language, colors
have a natural order. All people of the world, whether they come from the
sea, the desert or the mountains, order colors in the following sequence: 1.
black and white, 2. red, 3. green and yellow, 4. blue, 5. brown, 6. mauve,
pink, orange, grey and sometimes a twelfth term that differs from language
to language. (Colors
that refer to objects, such as aubergine or sepia, or
colors that are not generally applicable, such as blond, are excluded in this
discussion.) The precise discovery is the following: if a particular language
has a word for any of these colors, then it also has a word for all the
preceding ones. The result also implies that people
use these basic color
classes even if their language does not have a word for each of them. These
strong statements have been confirmed for over 100 languages.
(Adopted from
www.motionmountain.net
)
V.
Render this text from Russian into English:
Достарыңызбен бөлісу: