yes if it brust near the baby's ear or depends on the babys age
as at the edges tension on balloon is less therefore force at these diametrically opposite surfaces force due to pencil is not enough to burst the balloon
Balloon popping games include giving everyone a balloon which they tie to their ankle, and the objective is to burst others' balloons without letting your own get burst. Another game is to put slips of paper with either Sweet or Sorry into the balloons and then blow them up, after which everyone gets 30 seconds to pop as many balloons as possible and collect their rewards at the end.
The simple past of burst is "burst" and the past participle is also "burst."
No. If anything, you would burst your eardrums, thereby releasing the pressure and giving you one terrible headache.
Your eardrums constantly adjust, that way they don't burst
There's no particular scientific word for this. If you want a more erudite sounding word, you can say puncture or explode, or there's nothing wrong with burst.
Usually the balloon will burst.
it can burst your eardrums leaving you deaf
if we keep a pumpkin inside a balloon the balloon will not fly and will burst
If you throw a brick at a balloon it will probably burst.
The present perfect tense of burst is "has/have burst". For example, "The balloon has burst."
Red