A question particle is a grammatical element (word or affix) used in forming questions. These particles are, loosely speaking, generally split into two broad categories, yes/no question particles, which are used to form yes/no questions and wh-question particles which are particles used to form content (wh-) questions.
These particles are most commonly found in a sentence final position and second most commonly in a sentence initial position. There are also languages that have these particles in other positions: second, preceding/following the verb etc.
Good examples of these can be found in languages such as Mandarin Chinese (ma, ne etc.), Japanese (ka, noetc.) amongst many others.
This is called a particle or sometimes an interjection.
It was misspelled in the question. It is spelled particle and it is a piece of something.
the process by which a cell uses energy to surround a particle and enclose the particle in a vesicle to bring the particle into the cell is called endocytosis: the cell comes into contact with particle the cell membrane begins to wrap around the particle then the particle is bought into the cell
Particle in the English language refers to the a very tiny piece of something.
"Encouraged" is the simple past and past participle of the verb "encourage".
There is no such thing as a "particle product". Revisit your question, find out what you are actually looking for and resubmit the question.There is no such thing as a "particle product". Revisit your question, find out what you are actually looking for and resubmit the question.There is no such thing as a "particle product". Revisit your question, find out what you are actually looking for and resubmit the question.There is no such thing as a "particle product". Revisit your question, find out what you are actually looking for and resubmit the question.
There is insufficient information in the question to answer it. Please restate the question.
The particle in question gains or loses electrons.
The answer to your question is an electron.
An "element" is not a subatomic particle. Your question makes no sense and is therefore unanswerable.Another answer:Since an element is not a subatomic particle, the only answer can be a proton.
The ramp method best explains the particle model as far as buoyancy is concerned.
An atom is the smallest particle of an element that can be uniquely identified as that specific element.Note that this question is different from asking "What is the smallest particle in an atom?" (see related question below). Atoms are composed of smaller particles (protons, electrons, and neutrons), but the smallest thing that has the identity of a specific element is the atom.The smallest particle of an element that still retains all that element's properties is called an ATOM.
i think i get your question... Protons, Neutrons Electrons Good luck!!!
Answer each question
question not answered yet
the answer to this question is electron the answer to this question is electron
First of all this a bioscience question and not a particle physics question. Particle physics deals with the study of the properties of various subatomic particles. These particles cannot be seen by your eyes or a microscope. You would need a electron microscope or a more powerful instrument to see and study a particular particle. So please ask your question in the biology category.