A liquid is any material which readily assumes the shape of its container at room temperature.
A liquid has the the shape of the container.
You think probable to a covalent bond.
A covalent bond, (polar or non-polar)
To show it is a solid or a liquid or a gas
Dew Point: Is the temperature at which gas condenses into a liquid.
"covalent" OR "covalent bond"
Liquid
atomic weight
Please define "foreign from where" in your "to be edited" question.
A liquid has the the shape of the container.
You think probable to a covalent bond.
There are two elements which are liquid at room temperature and they are Mercury (Hg) and Bromine (Br). Copernicium (Cn) might be liquid at room temperature but chemists are not sure about it.
A covalent bond, (polar or non-polar)
because engenieers use it in a different for the chemist and they go more in depth with it.
To show it is a solid or a liquid or a gas
Mercury (Hg). Copernicium (Cn) is a metal that could be liquid at room temperature but chemists are not sure about it.
A solid is something that does not take the shape of its container and does not allow things to poke through easily. Examples: Table Person Computer