Any liquid that's added with heat can boil. Example: bubbling water or bubbling gravy.
e.g water to bubbling water
LIke when making soup, tea or coffee. It bassicaly means that the kinetic energy increases and the particles escape
No. Exothermic processes give off heat, to boil milk you have to put in heat.
No.
Melting point is when ice (solid), for example at room temperature, turns into water (liquid). Boiling point is when the melted water is heated until it boils and starts to bubble and give off steam - getting hot enough to scald.
Boiling point is a physical property not a chemical property.
When the salt dissolves in the water it raises the water's boiling temperature, so it stops boiling.
No. Exothermic processes give off heat, to boil milk you have to put in heat.
Boiling point is an example of a phase change of matter (from liquid to gas).
The boiling point of a substance is an example of a physical property of that substance.
Cooking pasta is an example of boiling. Ironically, boiled eggs are not an example of boiling (since they should actually be cooked at a simmer).
Vaporization
water boiling in a pot
No.
Boiling.
Boiling of water is one example, where liquid turns into a gas (hence some smoke-like thing also known as steam appears)
Of what?
For example melting or boiling.
ice cubes