Actually, you can boil liquids, and cotton is not a liquid. If you apply heat to cotton, it would burn before it would boil.
If you boil it, the water will boil and the dye will not, leaving you with dye.
I had the same question.we chane cotton fibres to cotton fabric by doinng three(3) proccess(i)ginning,(ii)spinning&(iii)weaving
cotton twine microwave with a small amount of water to kill bugs [boil for 1 min]
The word for bringing to a boil is "boil" or "bring to a simmer."
30 gallons
The word 'boil' is both a noun (boil, boils) and a verb (boil, boils, boiling, boiled).Examples:He brought a kettle of water to the boil. (noun)She developed a painful boil on her leg. (noun)I can boil your eggs or fry them. (verb)
Well, there is no difference in terms of the act of "boiling," but there is a grammatical difference. Saying "bring it to the boil" is unnecessary. There is no need for using the definite article "the" for "boil". Merely say or write "bring to boil" or "boil." These are good enough.
A blind boil is a boil which suppurates imperfectly, or fails to come to a head.
put the kettle on to boil
Boil what?
You can boil any type of meat.
you boil it in water