Yes, ice melts at 00C to from liquid water.
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 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 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 cream is a liquid at room temperature. hence "ice"-cream. ice melts when its temperature increases to over 00C
Heat flows from the water to the ice.
Because 'room temperature' is far warmer than 0 c
Oils are liquid triglycerides, at room temperature that is.
propanone is liquid at room temperature
Methanol is a liquid at room temperature.
Aluminium is not a liquid at room temperature.
mercury is a liquid at room temperatute At room temperature, mercury is a LIQUID.
Mercury. is the only metal that is liquid at room temperature.