Yes.... It is a liquid. People may confuse it as a gas since it has the word GAS in it. But its not when you pour gasoline, you can see liquid come out.
No, milk and gasoline are not examples of the same state of matter. Milk is a liquid, while gasoline is a volatile liquid.
Its matter.
gasoline is matter, it is burned to create energy
Yes, at room temperature, it is a liquid.
gasoline or a liquid
Milk and gasoline are examples of liquid matter. They are substances that take the shape of their container and have a definite volume, but not a definite shape.
Gasoline is a liquid. But many people may mistake it for a gas from its name (Gasoline). Also, though if left to evaporate the gasoline will turn into a gas like most liquids!
Intensive because the price of gasoline is not going to change no matter how much you get.
Gasoline is matter, a mixture of various petroleum distillate hydrocarbons, most of them in a liquid phase at room temperature. However, many fractions within gasoline are volatile and will vaporize readily in open air. The formulation of gasoline is by condensation temperature, so no two typical samples of gasoline will be identical unless they have been deliberately purified. The chemicals in gasoline include naphtha, naphthenes, alkanes, and alkenes, and additives such as ethanol.
No gasoline used in your car is in a liquid state.
milk and gasoline are the examples of the blank matter
Gasoline, or petrol, is a liquid. Otherwise, gas is its own phase, gaseous.