yes it is because there are many of chemicals on which the water bottle its' self has. when you freeze it then more and more new chemicals form. so dont drink or by frozen water bottles, juice, and or soda.
Uh...nope.
it is said that freezing water in an ordinary plastic bottle can cause cancer, you may like me thinki this is very stupid when you first hear this, but it is true! when you freeze the water, bits of plastic freeze into the water and so when you are drinking the water, you are drinking bits of plastic aswell! im not stopping you from doing this im just warning you of the outcome! the only thing that really annoys me about this is, that when i told my mates that my mum researched this up, they wont stop going on about it in the summer or whenever they see frozen water in a bottle, e.g they will say stuff like Emma's mummy says freezing water can give you cancer, it is really annoying!plus the other day my friend suddenly started saying that she wasnt going to eat, which was pretty random, so at lunch time my m8 was kinda forcing her to eat, then my friend said has anyone got any chewing gum, we all said no, then i said chewing gum is bad for you, and she said im NT gonna listen to your stupid explanation because you mummy says you can get cancer from freezing water! i wanted to cry because its not fair that im being bullied by the truth
Filled. For example, I filled the bottle.
EVACUATAED
To check for sulbe tested is filled sulphide ion contamination of drinking water, the water to be tested is filled in a bottle with a H2S strip. This sample is put in an incubator for 16 hours. If the test strip comes back black, the water is not fit for consumption.
hydrogen
A bottle of milk is a bottle filled with milk. A milk bottle can be reused many times by recycling which helps the environment to be clean.
A small bottle or flask used to measure the specific gravities of liquids; the bottle is weighed when it is filled with the liquid whose specific gravity is to be determined, when filled with a reference liquid, and when empty. Also known as density bottle; relative-density bottle.
The 2 liter bottle has the same worth regardless of what it is filled with, probable 1/10th of a cent or less.
As water freezes and becomes ice it expands in volume. If a bottle is half-filled with water and then frozen, the bottle should remain intact because the volume of air in the bottle will contract as the water/ice expands and so the airspace will accommodate the final volume of the ice. If the bottle is completely filled with water and then frozen, the bottle will most likely break because there is no airspace to 'absorb' the expansion of the water/ice. As the freezing is a relatively slow process, the bottle will not explode, but will in all likelyhood crack and may break apart.
Nothing. The bottle is now truly empty.
NO!
nothing happens