You can only pour sand...
and i think if salt is a solid then you can pour salt.
Hope this helped!
a solid is an object that is hard and liquid is something you can pour
It is easy to pour a liquid rather than solids because the molecule makeup of fluid is less packed than the molecule makeup of solids. In other words, the molecules of solids are more tightly packed than of fluids.
Yes, and solid is separated from the liquid by filtration.
A liquid. You can pour it onto your salad.
The definition of pour point is the lowest temperature at which a liquid begins to turn into a solid, so much so that it can no longer flow.
Yes. It sometimes looks like a liquid, but you cannot pour it.
The atoms in a solid are in a tighter formation that as they are in a liquid. In a liquid, They are loose and have the ability to pour.
To pour carefully and slowly so that any solid particles settle at the bottom of the container and do not get mixed with the liquid being poured out. This technique is often used to avoid transferring the solids along with the liquid.
Liquids. They will take the shape of whatever you pour them into. As opposed to solids. Hard to pour a brick into anything.
flour will become solid and some flour particles will float
I am sure it is a solid because you cant pour it so it is not a liquid and it is not a gas because you can't see a gas and you can see bicarbonate of soda.So it has to be a solid.
What you can't pour is a monolithic solid. A brick is a monolithic solid--it's a big hunk of baked clay. You can't pour the brick because all the atoms are stuck together too tightly. There are a lot of solids you CAN pour, such as sand, salt, sugar, flour...