Yes, ice melts at 00C to from liquid water.
Heat flows from the liquid at room temperature to the ice, in order to melt the ice and bring it to the same temperature as the liquid.
According to convention, room temperature is generally taken as about 20°C. At this temperature water will be in its liquid phase at standard atmospheric pressure. Also with reference to the wording of your question if something is a liquid (what is the liquid called) then it can not be ICE which is a solid.
ice is a solid and a liquid so if u put ice in room temperature you can just watch it melt and it will turn into a liquid because its not in a cold temperature
ice can melt at room temperature. Anything that is liquid at room temperature would, in its frozen state, melt at room temperature. Oils, beverages and mercury - if in a frozen state - would melt when exposed to room temperature.
Ice cream is a liquid at room temperature. hence "ice"-cream. ice melts when its temperature increases to over 00C
Because 'room temperature' is far warmer than 0 c
A substance can be frozen at room temperature if its freezing point is below the temperature of the room. This can happen with certain substances like liquid nitrogen or dry ice, which have very low freezing points and can transition from a liquid to a solid state at room temperature.
Oils are liquid triglycerides, at room temperature that is.
propanone is liquid at room temperature
it is liquid at room temprature
Bromine exists as a liquid at the room temperature.
Aluminium is not a liquid at room temperature.