No. Bubbles are made of compounds, but they aren't compounds themselves.
The word 'bubble' is both a verb (bubble, bubbles, bubbling, bubbled) and a noun (bubble, bubbles). The adjective form is bubbly. The word 'bubble gum' is a compound noun, an open spaced compound noun; two words joined to form a noun with its own meaning.
Excess air being excreted from the compound it came from.
Yes, the compound noun 'bubble gum' is a common noun, a word for any bubble gum of any kind.A proper noun for bubble gum would be the name of a specific bubble gum, for example Bazooka, Bubblicious, Bubble Yum, etc.
dilute hydrochloric acid
No, "bubble bath" does not have a hyphen. It is a compound noun made up of two separate words that describe a type of bath. Hyphens are typically used to connect words that function together as a single adjective before a noun, but in this case, "bubble bath" stands alone as a noun phrase.
Assuming you're referring solely to the base of the gum (chewy compound), it's basically a rubber synthesis. Rubber.
A bubble is neither an element or a compound. It is a pocket of gas that can contain either elements (oxygen gas, argon gas, etc.) of compounds such as carbon dioxide gas, various nitrous oxides.
To fix a water bubble in the wall, you will need to first identify and repair the source of the water leak causing the bubble. Once the leak is fixed, you can carefully puncture the bubble with a small hole, allowing the water to drain out. Use a putty knife to flatten the area and then apply a patching compound to cover the hole. Sand and paint the area to match the rest of the wall.
No. A bubble consists of a liquid envelope enclosing a gas. The liquid could be many different substances (such as soap solution), some of them compounds and some of them mixtures of compounds. The gas would most commonly be air which is a mixture of compounds.
When electricity passes through water, the hydrogen and oxygen separate and bubble off as gases.
Double bubble!
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