It is a chemical change.
Neither. It is a chemical change. The ability of wood to burn is a chemical property.
No, inflamabillity is a chemical property, because burning (of anything) is a chemical change.
I'm not sure what the Chemical difference in property is, but the physical difference would be that ash is powdery and wood is solid.
Wood burns. So, a chemical property could be that certain chemicals in wood react vigorously with oxygen. Burning is a chemcial change, and reactivity with oxygen 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...
Burning is a chemical change.
Chemical change
yes charring of wood is chemical change
A physical property is something like color, size, and state. The substance still stays the same! A chemical property is a change in substance. Burning is a chemical property because if you burn a piece of wood, it is a new substance and you cant change it back to regular wood. It is usually very hard to change a chemical change BACK to its original substance. The answer to this is No
Burning wood is a chemical change.
Combustion (burning) is a chemical change.
Burning is an oxydation reaction so a chemical change.