nothing
The colours of the olympic rings dont represent the continents, they are colours that all the flags have. Not one flag doesnt have an olympic ring colour.
The various rings on the Olympic flag do not represent any particular continent.
There are five Olympic rings. Each one representing a continent or region of the world. Blue - Oceania Yellow - Europe Black - Africa Red - The Americas Green - Asia
=== === The yellow stands for sunshine, blue stands for rain, green stands for luck, black stands for darkness along the way, and red stands for fun.
dont no
The five Olympic rings are red, yellow, blue, black and green in colour, representing each of the five participating continents-Asia, Africa, Australia, Europe and the Americas (North and South America are treated as one continent).
blue
because their favourite colour is blue
Blue black red yellow green
There are five rings on the Olympic flag because the International Olympic Committee considers there to be five continents that send athletes to compete in the Olympics. Those continents are Europe, Australia, Africa, Asia, and the Americas (the IOC considers North America and South America as one continent). There is no ring for Antartica since there are no indigenous people from Antartica and, therefore, no countries from there send athletes to compete at the Olympics, at least for now. The rings are interlocked to show the coming together of athletes from all over the world at the Olympic Games. The colors of the five rings (blue, red, black, green, yellow) represented the colors found on flags of competing countries at the time of the symbol's design, which was 1913. No ring stands for any one continent nor does any color stand for any one continent, they are purely symbolic at this time, despite popular misconceptions.
There are 5 rings on the Olympic flag: blue, yellow, black, green, and red.Or if you count the two small rings where they attach the flag to the flagpole, seven.