The colours on the olympic flag represent a different flag because each flag of every country may have all of the colours or just one of the colours on their countries flag.
Olympic rings
The five Olympic rings represent the five parts of the world involved in the Olympics and were designed in 1912, adopted in June 1914 and debuted at the 1920 Antwerp Olympics.
The symbol of the Olympic Games is composed of five interlocking rings, coloured blue, yellow, black, green, and red on a white field. This was originally designed in 1912 by Baron Pierre de Coubertin, the founder of the modern Olympic Games. According to de Coubertin, the ring colours with the white background stand for those colors that appeared on all the national flags that competed in the Olympic games at that time. Upon its initial introduction, de Coubertin stated the following in the August, 1912 edition of Olympique:HOPE IT HELPEDOrana Es
The colors of the rings in the Olympic flag do not represent any continent or country. The colors represent the colors found in the flags of the nations that compete in the Olympic Games.
There are 6 colours on the Olympic flag - blue, black, red, yellow, green and white.
There is no particular meaning to each color in the Olympic flag. The colors that are on the flag represent the colors that can be found in almost all nations of the world.
5 Colors On The Olympic Flag
It is not 'designed'. The olympic flag is always the same. If you want to know why search for the question: what are the olympic ring colors
Horsy butt
the blue stands for peace and the white stands for war.
Every country has at least one of these colors on their flag
All of the country flag colors. (I'm only 8)
Blue stands for King. Red stands for nation and white stands for religion
White stands for clearness blue stands for courage red stands for blod
Red stands for blood, white stands for health, and blue stands for kindness