Water bottle is NOT a compound word. It is two words, bottle the noun and water the adjective. Good luck with your English assignment.....
Water bottle is NOT a compound word. It is two words, bottle the noun and water the adjective. Good luck with your English assignment.....
Water bottle is NOT a compound word. It is two words, bottle the noun and water the adjective. Good luck with your English assignment.....
Yes, "waterbottle" is a compound word made up of the words "water" and "bottle" joined together to form a new word with a distinct meaning.
One option is bluebottle.
One such word is bottleneck.
Right, the nearest I can get to it is White Mixture or Compound. Gwyn = White Kemysk = Mixture Kemskys = Compound As it was on a bottle of wine it probably refers to a mix of the grapes to make the wine.
Neither the water nor the bottle are elements. Pure water is a compound, but most bottled waters are mixtures as they contain traces of minerals. The bottle is likely to be a mixture whatever it's made of.
A plastic soda bottle is made of polyethylene terephthalate (PET), which is a compound. It is composed of multiple elements such as carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen chemically bonded together in a specific ratio.
No. Potassium chloride is an ionic compound. (By the way, the way the question is worded implies that one could have a bottle full of "chloride," which is at least misleading.)
No, air in a bottle is not a compound. Air is a mixture of different gases, including nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide, and others. Compounds are substances formed by the chemical combination of two or more elements in fixed proportions, which is not the case with the gases in air.
A bottle of chloroform typically contains a liquid chemical compound that was historically used as an anesthetic. It is known for its ability to induce unconsciousness when inhaled. However, due to its potential for toxicity and misuse, its use has been largely discontinued in medical settings.
Oxalic acid is a stable compound.