Yes!
Yes, melted metal can be solidified again by allowing it to cool and re-solidify. The process involves letting the melted metal cool down to its freezing point, at which point it will turn back into a solid state.
Glass is a solid. It is melted silicon that has cooled quickly. A mineral that cools slowly can become a crystal.
2/7.85 = 254.777 millilitres
It is an amorphous solid. The sugar in peanut brittle is melted and then is cooled too fast for the crystalline structure to properly reform, making it irregular.
Animal fats such as lard from pork or dripping from beef can be melted and will become a solid again when they go cold, however dairy fats such as butter will still return to a solid, but never to it's original 'creamy' solid state once it has been melted.
the example of liquid to solid ice liquid water convert in to solid ice...............
It depends on the recipe. Shortening becomes solid at room temperature while vegetable oil does not. So vegetable oil may be substituted for melted shortening only in recipes that do not depend on shortening becoming solid for texture when cooled.
idly maavu (flour prepared for dosai or idly)
This cannot happen literally or chemically but an explanation similar to the question is given below. A solid can melt into a solid but this can happen only when we are making alloys. Suppose we are making the alloy bronze ( Cu + Sn). Then these metals are melted and mixed in different proportions. Then the mixture is cooled and the atoms freely mix and lock together to form bronze. In this process, copper is melted into tin and vice versa.
Ice is a solid and when melted it turns into a liquid freeze it again and it is solid
a liquid then if cooled further it would turn into a solid a liquid then if cooled further it would turn into a solid
No it is solid.