Unlike orange, which is a very ordinary, basic color word, there's no everyday word for the color between green and blue. There are, of course, hundreds of specialized color names.
"Cyan" is a sort of a special case. It is a greenish blue, but In everyday life, people do not use it. I've never heard someone talk about a "cyan" dress, and even the biggest box of Crayolas does not include a "cyan" crayon.
"Cyan" is a somewhat specialized technical name used in subtractive color printing (the process used for magazine illustrations). A computer screen works by adding light of three different colors: red, green, and blue. On a printed page, the printing inks are laid one on top of another and successively remove or "subtract" light. The traditional ink colors used in a common "four-color printing process" are cyan, magenta, yellow, and black, often referred to as CYMK. Cyan = green + blue, magenta = red + blue, yellow = red + green. If you "mix" cyan and yellow, by printing one on top of another, the cyan layer passes green and blue light but screens out red, while the yellow layer passes red and green light but screens out blue. The only color that pass through both layers is green. Thus, in subtractive color printing, cyan and yellow make green.