Coke, Fanta, Solo, Sunkist Yes
you add CO2 in a drink. Now how to you put CO2 and water together. With lots and lots of pressure. Does that answer your question?
1957
Borax, also known as sodium borate, is used in bath fizzies as a binder that helps hold the ingredients together. It can also help create a harder, more durable bath fizzy. Additionally, borax can provide some soothing properties to the skin.
Methadone is sometimes referred to as "fizzies" in street slang due to its formulation in effervescent tablets or its method of consumption, which may involve dissolving it in liquid, creating a fizzy effect. This colloquial term reflects the drug's association with recreational use and highlights its presence in the illicit drug scene. The nickname can also stem from the way users might mix it with soda or other beverages for easier ingestion.
Yes, it's your drink, you can drink out of it at any time.
The bubble in coca cola is CO2. They push it in, it reacts with water to become an acid [H2CO2 which splits into H+ and CO2-], making the drink acid = low pH. With shaking or standing it for a long time, the CO2 gets out, and you keep a much less acid drink = higher pH. Low pH is acid, high pH is alkaline. pH of 7 is neutral - not acid and not alkaline. By the way, the acid in bubbly drinks dissolves the enamel in teeth - dentists can tell who drinks a lot of fizzies by looking at people's teeth. It also dissolves some of the calcium in bones - contributing to brittle bones [osteoporosis]. Bubbles taste good, but regular consumption isn't healthy.
The future tense of drink is will drink.
They drink tea
drink drink drink!!
The future tense of drink is will drink.
drink slowly drink quickly drink thirstily
she doens't drink any alcholoic drink