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The Change That Means Products And Cannot Be Returned Back To A Reactant Is A Chemical Change.
Irreversible means that something can not be changed back. If you could change something back (ice back into water, for instance) then that process is reversible.
I guess it is a chemical change as the exploded fireworks cant be regained back which is possible in a physical change and not in a chemical change.
It is a chemical change. A chemical change is when you can't take the item back to its original state. Ex. A baked cake can't go back to cake batter.
it is a physical change most of the times because you can get i back into its original form. for ice, or plastic... its physical. but for styrofoam, its a chemical change because you cant get it back.
This is a back slash: \. It is usually above the enter key.
Electronic Signature
"There and Back Again" by Daughtry.
Follow the backslash with another backslash: System.out.println("\\ " \"); will display \ " \ on the screen.
To type a backslash on a Korean keyboard, you typically need to press the "한/영" key (located near the spacebar) to switch to English mode, and then type the backslash () key which is usually located near the right side of the keyboard.
The proper name for a 'backslash' in print is a 'reverse solidus'.
Use the Backslash key, just above the "return" key on the right side of the keyboard. The key will have two characters: | ("pipe") and \ ("backslash").
I think the backslash is right underneath the question mark on any computer.
You can delete a user profile in Windows 98 by typing in a specific registry key into the Registry Editor. Type HKEY underscore LOCAL underscore MACHINE backslash SOFTWARE backslash Microsoft backslash Windows backslash CurrentVersion backslash ProfileList. Quit the Registry Editor and go to My Computer and delete the specific user name folder.
To do a backslash on MicroSoft word 2007 you press the key that's right under the backspace key.
The drive letter followed by colon backslash dir backslash C:\windows\dir
/ forward slash ^First answer is wrong. It's the backslash (\)