Yes.
Yes, drying wet clothes is a physical change because the water in the clothes evaporates when exposed to heat, but the clothes themselves remain the same chemically.
It is a Physical Change because i dont know but im sure that is a physical change :P
Drying clothes would be a physical change. The clothes themselves do not change either chemically or physically, so one needs to consider the removal or liquid water from the clothes. This is simply a phase change of H2O liquid to H2O vapor (steam). It is still H2O either way, so there is no chemical change. It would be a physical change.
Drying clothes involves a physical change rather than a chemical change. The water present in the wet clothes evaporates when exposed to heat or air, changing its state from liquid to gas without undergoing a chemical reaction.
Drying wet clothes is a physical change because the water molecules on the clothes simply evaporate into the air, changing state from liquid to gas, without altering the chemical composition of the clothes themselves.
Lighting a match is not a physical change because it involves a chemical reaction that produces heat and light, resulting in the transformation of the matchstick. Drying wet clothes and cutting snowflakes from paper are physical changes because they involve a change in appearance or state of matter without altering the chemical composition of the substances.
The drying itself is (always) a physical change.
No. But the do get smaller.
Drying (involving only the water evaporation) is a physical change.
With a physical reaction, some of the substance changes, but the stubstance is still the same. A chemical reaction on the other hand, is hard to reverse. Physical: freezing of water, drying of clothes, mixing of iorn nails and sand Chemical: cooking of food
Ignition of a match is a chemical process.
The answer is lighting a match box because when doing so, the match goes into flames and flammability is a chemical change. When cutting a snowflake, the substances do not change, neither does it change when drying wet clothes. The person earlier said drying wet clothes, but he/she is wrong because when you dry wet clothes, the water goes through a physical change called evaporation, which is NOT a chemical change. I hope this helps. Good luck on your chapter assessments(I'm doing mine too). :)