Yes fire does need water to put it out or you could use baking soda to also stop the fire
Yes: water is stronger than fire. You can extinguish a conflagration with water, but you can't stop a flood with fire. It's true that fire can make water vapor away, but you need A LOT of fire versus A SMALL amount of water. Plus, even vapor can extinguish fire.
Hair can not be flamable if you tryed that your hair would nbe on fire and that you would of need water to take the fire off
No and water is not stronger than fire. In the case that the water gets frozen the fire can melt it. The water can also put out the fire. But many things of the same substances can start fire with the correct amount of friction.
The fire tetrahedron consists of oxygen, heat, fuel and a chemical reaction.
Because water and fire don't work well together. This is why fire fighters use water to put out fires.
You Need Water to Put OUt a Fire.
You can boil the water and then stick your hand in it. For the wash with fire, create your fire, then place a pot of water slightly elevated above the fire and boil the water, then stick your thing in need of cleaning in the pot of boiling water
Water is pretty useful against fire but if the fire is very big you will need much more than if it was a little fire. Obviously.
Yep.
water
Water defeats fire, because water has oxegyen in it, we need oxegyen and when we go jump in a pool we can't breath.
Yes: water is stronger than fire. You can extinguish a conflagration with water, but you can't stop a flood with fire. It's true that fire can make water vapor away, but you need A LOT of fire versus A SMALL amount of water. Plus, even vapor can extinguish fire.
Fire
Fire!
We had a small fire in our basement. We need to now get this repaired. Who would I call to get the fire water damage repaired and what questions should I ask?
No, it requires fire. Come on, obviously you need water to do anything involving water.
By knowing the flow rates of fire hydrants in the area, and the residual pressure, firefighters can determine the maximum fire flow available. The size of a fire determines the amount of fire flow necessary to extinguish the fire.