liquid
Yes, it involves changing from a solid to a liquid.
Not really. Snow is minute particles of ice loosely joined together, and when you pack it together hard, all the particles of ice come together and makes one big lump of ice. Another thing; If it was liquid, it would be called rain, not snow.
flake
Rain- liquid hail- solid sleet- liquid snow - solid is there any other types of precipitaiton?
Its Flake. Sand contains grains of sand. Snow contains flakes of snow.
Because it is a frozen liquid, and since it is frozen it isn't liquid.
Snow flake!
The two states of matter in a snow cone are ( 1 ) solid and ( 2 ) liquid.
A snowball is considered a solid because it is made up of tightly packed snowflakes that maintain their structure and form. However, snow can transition between solid and liquid states depending on temperature and pressure conditions.
They are examples of solid ice, because they aren't a liquid until they melt, so in the regular form of ice, snow, and frost, they are solid.
Rain, snow, sleet, or hail are all considered forms of precipitation. Rain is liquid, snow is solid, hail is solid. In chemistry precipitation is a solid substance precipitated out of a solution
Solid is snow; liquid is rain and gas is water vapor