It sounds like some sort of protection or warding conjure.
It means that you have to name the physical appearance of a brick, so it would be that the brick is brown and etc,.
The brick one would probably right but it would depend on the temp. of your water
Lebrun
I will must believe the brick would crumble before that happened.
Well it doesn't weigh 10 lbs! Ordinarily, a brick would be considered incompressible, and that is still probable in 5000 ft of water. And assuming that it had no entrained air! BUT, water at 5000 ft is compressible (for which you'll have to look up an hydrology table) and the volume of water displaced by the brick will now weigh more than that volume would have had at the surface. And as soon as you have immersed your brick, it will weigh less than it previously did, by the weight of water it displaced. remember Archimedes? SO your brick would now be slightly more buoyant (weigh less) than it did close to the surface. In an exam answer, one would usually say 'assuming the brick is incompressible', and 'assume the brick is impermeable'. Of course you could also 'assume that water is incompressible', and eliminate the hydrology tables! Then proceed with the answer.
Strip it.
The water will keep you warmer than the brick. The water has a higher heat volume and will take longer to cool down than the brick.
brown basilisk
Wood float on water, bricks not.
look in the water tank and see if the water in there is brown too...it might be rust in the pipes
if you mean 'tertiary' that is a kind of brown. for example tertiary red would be a brownish red 'or brick' same goes with yellow and blue
it would be the brick because the brick has more matter because it weighs more.