Burning is an example of a chemical property because it can only be observed during a chemical reaction called combustion.
Burning is a chemical process. The ability to burn, flammability, is a chemical property.
Chemical property; flammability implies ease of burning, and burning is a chemical change.
Flammability is an example of the chemical property.
Burning is a chemical process, not a property.
Combustibility is a quality not a quantity so it is an intensive property.
No, it is a chemical property
I think you mean "Is burning a paper a physical change?" Burning a paper is not a physical change. It is a chemical change. Because you can't turn the ashes of the paper into a normal paper again. Examples of physical change: Cutting a paper, sharpening a pencil, writing on a paper... Examples of chemical change: Rotten egg, Rusted steel, molded bread...
No, it is a chemical property
Flammability is a chemical property; burning is a change.
Neither. It is a chemical change. The ability of wood to burn is a chemical property.
Stating that something is flammable is stating a chemical property. But the actual burning would be a chemical change.
It is a chemical change.