Obviously not. Many liquids are flammable.
Sand, water or a fire extinguisher are all effective at putting out a wood fire.
mostly liquids sometimes gases can become liquids
to start a fire you must have 3 things oxygen heat and fuel.
put it in a bottle.
Gasses have atoms in them that bounce off each other and move around all over the place. Solids have atoms in them that stay put/don't move.A liquids atoms vibrate.
Burning liquids- grease, gasoline, etc.
B-1 is for a Class B fire, that is, flammable/combustible liquids and gases.
Use extinguishers with a class B rating. They are intended for use on burning liquids.
Burning liquids- grease, gasoline, etc.
A type b extinguisher puts out a class B fire, i.e., flammable/combustible liquids and gases.
Burning liquids such as gasoline, kerosene, paint, acetone, and so on.
That is a B extinguisher, Used for burning liquids, such as gasoline, diesel fuel, paint, grease, etc.
All fire needs oxygen so all you have to do is smother it.
don't know but the ancient Greeks added fire to that list and called them the four elements. so they knew of them but misunderstood them. all solids were some form of "earth", all liquids some form of "water", all gasses some form of "air", then there was fire.
Cold Fire is an extinguisher used to put out any types of fires of class A, B or D. Those include ordinary combustibles, flammable liquids, flammable gases, and combustible metals. The fire classes are according to American standards.
Not all fire extinguishers will put out all fires. You must check your fire extinguisher to make sure that is equipped for all fires since different fires must be put out different ways.
**Use it as a adjective**Water is a nonflammable liquid. **Use it a noun** Firemen must use nonflammable liquids to put out a fire.