No, it's not even approximately true.
Your answer is true.
True. In the environment, matter is often found in the form of mixtures, where two or more substances are physically combined but retain their individual properties. This can include mixtures of solids, liquids, or gases in various combinations.
Liquids have a definite volume but take the shape of their container. They are not shapeless like gases, but they do not have a fixed shape like solids.
secret
Yes, it is true.
Yes, gases, liquids, and solids are the three primary states of matter. Gases have molecules that are far apart and move freely, liquids have particles that are close together but can still move past one another, and solids have tightly packed particles that vibrate in place.
A solution is a homogeneous mixture of two or more liquids, only one phase. When another phase exist (for example solids, immiscible liquids) this is not a true solution.
True. But it's mainly a matter of word definitions than some kind of an absolute. For instance; where do you classify a black hole?
Yes, it is true.
Gas laws are derived from the kinetic theory of gases, which assumes that gas particles are in constant motion and have negligible volume. Solids and liquids have stronger intermolecular forces that keep their particles closer together, preventing the same level of random motion seen in gases. Therefore, the assumptions underlying the gas laws do not hold true for solids and liquids.
True
that is TRUE