Yes, it typically is. Both the wood (sawdust) removed and the remaining block are still wood. They have not changed chemically. For that matter, reducing the whole block to sawdust would not make the wood a different substance, only a different form.
Physical-it is still wood, just in small pieces
It is a physical change.
Physical.
Flammability is an example of physical and chemical properties.
It is a physical change, because the wood is still wood but it is in a different form
It is a physical change, because you're giving the wood a new shape.
It is physical change. There are no chemical reactions taking place when you sand wood.
when wood rots it is a physical change and not a chemical change.
Physical-it is still wood, just in small pieces
A physical change because the chemical composition of the wood does not change.
Its a physical change
You're not changing the substance when you chop wood. Therefore, it is a physical change.
Wood is a material. It is not a change.
is hammering wood togehter to build a playhouse a physical change or a cemical change
It is a physical change.
It would be a physical change because you are changing the shape of the wood not the chemical composition of the wood. However, you could possibly create a chemical change if you could hammer hard and long enough to burn the wood. Not likely, but it is possible.
Yes. Carving wood is a physical change because you are changing its appearance without changing what its made of.