No. A flame is not a living thing because it does not engage in metabolic activity, it does not reproduce sexually or asexually, and it lacks genetic material. The only relation it has to the living is that it needs air, specifically oxygen.
Of the 3 things flame, Euglena, and fish only one of them is living. Only fish are living of the 3 items.
One thing that can start a fire is a match if you strike the match on the side of the box the match will produce a flame.
No, a candle flame is not a living thing. Living things have the ability to grow, reproduce, respond to stimuli, and maintain homeostasis, qualities that a candle flame does not possess. A candle flame is a result of a chemical reaction between the wax and oxygen, producing light and heat.
the goldfish is a living thing
A flame is consider a Non-living thing, because a flame doesn't have all the Emergent Characteristics. A flame doesn't have a cell. and According the emergent characteristic list all living things have a cell.I hope this helped
Yes, the boiling water has more heat than the match flame.
Yes
The thing on the end of a match is called the match head. It is typically made from a mixture of oxidizing agents, sulfur, and glass powder, which ignite when struck against a rough surface. This chemical reaction produces the flame needed to light the match. The composition can vary between safety matches and strike-anywhere matches, affecting how they ignite.
It doesn't display the properties of life, such as cellular organization, reproduction, growth and development, etc etc.
Yes, the noun 'match' is a common noun, a general word for a small stick used to ignite a flame; a game or sport in which a person or group competes against another; a resemblance or correspondence between one person or thing and another; a seemingly suitable combination of one person or thing with another.The word 'match' is also a verb: match, matches, matching, matched.
Lighting a match twice will not result in a second flame as the match has already been consumed during the first ignition. Once the match head has burned completely, it will not produce another flame upon subsequent attempts.
In a dark room, both a match and a candle will provide a visible source of light. A match will produce a small, temporary flame while a candle will burn steadily with a larger flame. The visibility will depend on the size of the room, the darkness of the environment, and the intensity of the flame.