Yes
yes. some lizards can
Lizards. Some can even change their color to match whatever they are standing on.
You can match with silver sneakers with blue and white clothes
Myth: Chameleons change color to match their environment. Chameleons don't change color to match their environment. Rather, they change color as a response to mood, temperature, health, communication, and light.
Olive green is generally easier to match with liquid silver, but this is a matter of opinion.
yes
Not really. While there are reptiles that can change color, none of them live in the ocean.
The answer is lighting a match box because when doing so, the match goes into flames and flammability is a chemical change. When cutting a snowflake, the substances do not change, neither does it change when drying wet clothes. The person earlier said drying wet clothes, but he/she is wrong because when you dry wet clothes, the water goes through a physical change called evaporation, which is NOT a chemical change. I hope this helps. Good luck on your chapter assessments(I'm doing mine too). :)
Ignition of a match is a chemical process.
Yes. Chameleons are polychromatic because they can change color to match the trees, leaves, and ground around them.
It should ask "Is there" not their. Honestly.
Lighting a match is not a physical change because it involves a chemical reaction that produces heat and light, resulting in the transformation of the matchstick. Drying wet clothes and cutting snowflakes from paper are physical changes because they involve a change in appearance or state of matter without altering the chemical composition of the substances.