No, it takes a liw amount of heat to be able to heat iron up. Meaning that if iron was outside, the iron would heat up whatever object it has inside of it relatively quickly. If you want to get into specifics, iron has a low specific heat, so a low amount of energy is needed in order for temperature to change (energy is measured in heat [juoles])
Yes.
It keeps stuff cool
Cloth is a bad conductors/good insulator of heat. Bad conductors keep things warm or cold, so the answer is, because cloth is a bad conductor of heat!
Paper is an insulator- it does not transmit heat well, so it keeps heat in (or out) of things.
This gas in your refrigerator draws heat away and makes the objects cold
Things which keep warm things warm and cold things cold are referred to as insulators.
Turtle
Yes, it can also keep things cold.
The best way to keep something cold is to place it in a cooler that is filled with ice. You can also place things underground to keep them cool or place them in a refrigerator.
fairies are scared of iron but more scared of cold iron
To insulate : To keep warm things warm and cold things cold
plastic wrap doesn't keep things cold because i don't even now?
Yes.
To Keep food cold so it doesn't spoil. Also to keep things that are supposed to be cold cold. Also to keep foods that are supposed to be frozen frozen.
to keep all the cold or frozen things nice and cold
Yes it would as insulators keep in the heat and keep it out depending on whether the item is hot or cold.
To keep things cold.