Drinking from a straw is the same as an egg going into a glass bottle, because air pressure in both cases is used to move something.
In the straw, you reduce the air pressure in the straw, so the air pressure around the drink pushes it up into the straw and into your mouth.
In the egg, you reduce the air pressure in the bottle, and air pressure around the egg pushes it down into the bottle.
When you put a straw in a water bottle I think the straw stinks and then when you let go of breathing in the water bottle I think it increases and then after that I think when you boil water and then you put the straw in the bottle and put the boiling hot water in the bottle and then I think the straw is like cutting it thanks for reading this but I think it's the wrong answer sorry if it is
That depends on the substance of which the device is fabricated. If it's made of metal, then your metal straw is electrically conductive. If it's glass or paper, then it isn't.
The importance of having drinking straws is so you can get liquid out of an enclosed container
drilling
1) Drinking 2) Blowing bubbles 3) Blowing air at kid brother to annoy him 4) Blowing spitballs across classroom 5) Creates employment for straw industry. That was easy.
Objects that look like a cylinder include a pencil, a soda can, a drinking glass, a pill bottle, and a roll of paper towels.
Yes, plastic drinking straws will float in water.
When you put a straw in a water bottle I think the straw stinks and then when you let go of breathing in the water bottle I think it increases and then after that I think when you boil water and then you put the straw in the bottle and put the boiling hot water in the bottle and then I think the straw is like cutting it thanks for reading this but I think it's the wrong answer sorry if it is
The drinking straw as we know it today was invented in 1888 by Marvin Stone.
It is by; drinking Water Plugged Ears. One should drink the entire glass of water with a straw and block both of his/her ears.
No, not a drinking straw. As for straw as in grass, I guess someone could eat that.
Materials:Per group of pupils:A rigid plastic bottle with a lidPlay dough or modelling clay, e.g. PlasticineA transparent plastic drinking strawA pair of scissorsFood coloring (optional)Tap waterProcedure:Use a pair of scissors to make a hole in the top of the bottle lid, big enough for the drinking straw to fit through.Fill the bottle halfway with cold water.Add a few drops of food colouring and mix.Screw on the bottle lid and insert the straw through it into the water, making sure that the straw does not touch the base of the bottle.Seal around the hole in the lid using play dough, thereby fixing the straw in place. The seal must be completely airtight.
get a water bottle then poke a hole in the cap then put a straw though the cap and there you go !
The modern drinking straw was patented on 3 December 1888 by Marvin Chester Stone.
Historians have four that the earliest drinking straw was made by Sumerians for drinking beer. It was used to avoid the solid byproducts of fermentation.
Like you would if you were sucking soup out of your spoon. Or like you're drinking out of a bottle or straw (lol).
It is prehistoric.