If heated to a high enough temperature yes, rock will boil.
Boiling a rock will not cause it to change its composition or characteristics. Rocks are made up of minerals and are not affected by boiling.
When you boil a rock, the heat causes any water or moisture trapped within the rock to expand and escape as steam. The rock itself does not change chemically or physically, although extreme heat could potentially cause some rocks, such as metamorphic ones, to undergo changes if exposed for a long time.
sugar and water......boil sugar and water drop in a string let evaporate
The word for bringing to a boil is "boil" or "bring to a simmer."
You dont. When you boil it in water, the sugar dissolves. Then let cool and evaporate and provide a crystallization seed, e.g. a thread. The sugar will cristallize out in large crystals as rock candy.
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)
Yes, It turns rock hard. The only way to turn it back to its flemsy self is to boil it in some hot water.
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.
No you can not boil a watermelon.
A blind boil is a boil which suppurates imperfectly, or fails to come to a head.
you boil it in water