You could cut it, you could use it to build a chair, you could bend it, etc... .
Flammability is an example of physical and chemical properties.
I guess it could be chemical, but really- it's a physical change
Well it could either be a physical change OR a chemical change. .
Chemical Change - Someone toasting bread until it is crisp. (Or just cooking in general, but does not apply to all types of food)Physical Change - Someone pouring one of those Crystal Lights into water.
Regardless of what the object is doing before the change, the only thing that can change its motion is force.
cut it
It undergoes a physical change... IE: ice and steam have the same chemical makeup (H20). To undergo a chemical change, the substance has to interact with something else. However, this can be a trick question because if something is heated in a real world setting then it could possible react with oxygen, nitrogen, carbon dioxide, or another trace gas in air.
you can try water and sunlight. if that doesn't work, try using something else that could resemble the sunlight.
undergo: to endure underwent is just the past tense of undergo. if you were to use "undergo" you would say "She no longer wanted to undergo such pain, and so, she took her own life" or "little did she know, she was about to undergo such a change that no one could prepare for" in this case, "underwent" would be used like... "Because of this dissociation, she underwent a change both mentally and physically."
It is a physical change because when salt is added to water,it is dissolved in it which only changes its physical appearance.
A physical change in a tennis ball could be flattening or deformation from being hit or squeezed. Another physical change could be discoloration or fading of the ball's outer fabric due to exposure to sunlight or wear and tear.
Yes, you could cut it, you could eat it, you could smush it, etc...