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Because the rate of evaporation depends upon the surface area exposed to the atmosphere. The surface area of a saucer is greater than that of a cup which makes it easier for tea to evaporate rapidly which thereby makes the tea cool.
any 2 elements that are a non-metal and another non-metal such as SiP
A tiny sip of everclear will burn you throat and will give oyu a pounding headache, i know from past experience......not good.
Accidentally taking a sip of tea with mold in it will more than likely not make you sick. However, if large amounts were consumed, you could get mold sickness.
Yes. You do not swallow the toothpaste. You can even rinse. Fasting blood tests are not meant to torture you, a small sip of water with morning medication is also allowable.
Stick a straw through the metal rapper and sip
No, dogs can't drink from a straw. They don't have lips and they can't make a seal around a straw to create suction.
you can sip more out of 1 straw than 2
Sip it through a straw.
my daughter just took her first sip from a straw today and she's only 6 months 3 weeks. i am so excited!! she's reached another milestone!!!
Drinking alcohol through a straw may slow down the rate at which you consume alcohol (depending on how you normally drink), but it will not change how the alcohol is processed in the body. As a result, drinking alcohol through a straw will not make a person any more or less drunk than drinking the alcohol regularly. (Assuming the amount of alcohol consumed is equal in both circumstances and the length of time in both circumstances is also equal.) The only time drinking alcohol through a straw would be faster than regular alcohol consumption is if you merely sip alcohol regularly. One can always chug a drink faster than one can sip it through a straw.Also, drinking anything through a straw will not mix the drink with air. The only time the liquid passing through a straw has air bubbles in it is when there is too little liquid in the container to adequately cover the end of the straw submerged in said liquid when suction occurs. Even if you do drink most of your drink and you intake the last little bit with some air bubbles, the alcohol will not mix with the air. And even if it did mix with the air, there's no reason why the air-alcohol mix would get anywhere near the nasal cavity. And there's no reason why the nasal cavity would absorb the alcohol any faster than your digestive tract.
To drink by swallowing small quantities at a time. To drink in sips. Have a sip of Tea.
Because liquids are basically just a collection of particles with barely enough energy to separate them, they are very closely packed and any pressure applied must be very high to force them closer. As you apply a force to them, they cannot easily compress, so they pass the force on. (This is the principal of hydraulic pressure.)
first you go dip, dip, dip. a'then ya go sip, sip, sip. MUNCH MUNCH MUNCH it's a dip, sip, MUNCH.
The difference between a sip and a drink is in the amount. A sip is only taking a little bit while a drink is taking alot from the beverage one is partaking in.
The simple answer is that when you sip on a straw you draw air out of it. Since there cannot be a vacuum, the liquid comes up the straw to replace the air. But this is also happening: When you sip on a straw you cause a reduction in air pressure inside the straw. The air pressure on the liquid outside the straw is now greater than on the inside. Because nature doesn't like an imbalance, it gets pushed down into the glass and thus up the straw.
Sip It's basically to drink slowly.