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Toothpaste is a colloidal gel.
No, toothpaste is a common noun. It can be used as a noun adjunct (attributive noun) in terms such as toothpaste tube.
sodium fluoride
so it can come out cause it has zero force
Sodium lauryl sulfate, which is a detergent, is an ingredient of some brands of toothpaste. You should be able to tell by looking at the ingredient list on the toothpaste tube.
Fluoride is extremely toxic. Babies will swallow the toothpaste, where adults spit it out and aren't poisoned. One tube of regular fluoride toothpaste can kill two small children. Do not purchase fluoride toothpaste for children ~ especially babies!Answer:A tube of toothpaste will not kill two small children. It has never happened, and it never will. All research indicates that the amount of fluoride in toothpaste is known to reduce the incidence of tooth decay in children, that's all.Like all household chemicals (soaps, detergents, furniture polish, etc.) use of toothpaste by small children should involve adult supervision. Read the label.
Toothpaste is a Liquid there are mant diffrent toothpastes but they are liquids because you can sqeeze it out of a tube but if it was a solid you couldnt get it out of the tube if any further qestions please just ask thankyou x
It all varies on the shape of the tube and the onces in the tube...so the tube ithink is best for holding the most toothpaste is creast!
A tube of toothpaste cost about $25.98 in 1935
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The collective noun for toothpaste is a tube of toothpaste.
Toothpaste is a colloidal gel.
Toothpaste is a mixture.
They fill the tube from the bottom then seal the end. The cap is already in place when the tube is filled.
yes it is
No, children's toothpaste is not edible...if it contains fluoride and it will make you or a child very sick. "Toddler" toothpaste does not contain fluoride - so check the container if you are not sure which type of toothpaste is being questioned.The U.S. poison control centers receive thousands of calls each year due to fluoride poisoning. Early symptoms include stomach pain, nausea, vomiting, fever and excessive saliva. In rare cases, cardiac failure can occur.Most tubes of children's fluoride toothpaste made in the USA contain enough fluoride to severely poison a child who weighs up to 62 lbs. if the whole tube is ingested. The smaller the child the less toothpaste is needed to be toxic.Excessive toothpaste use by children under the age of 8 can result in the development of fluorosis in the form of small white specks on the teeth or more severe discoloration and roughness. This damage is found on the child's permanent teeth.Prevention:Children's toothpaste should be placed on the brush in an amount roughly the size of a pea.Keep toothpaste and all medicine out of reach of small children.Always supervise children up to age 6 while they brush their teeth to make sure the toothpaste is being spit out.
The manufacturing process layers the different colors of toothpaste in the tube so that when you squeeze the tube, multiple colors of toothpaste come out.