Well it obviously depends on the make and brand- liquid, mousse, cream or puff.
No, my material makeup is not solid silver.
Depends on the chemical makeup of the substance.
Mercury is made of rock with a solid inner core.
Itis a solid. It just is just broken up like sand.
mineral
i dont know thats y i asked u
Lancome, Chanel, max factor, bourjois and lancaster are one of the most popular brands of makeup. They make everything from eyeliner to solid foundations. They even make skin creams.
It is easy to pour a liquid rather than solids because the molecule makeup of fluid is less packed than the molecule makeup of solids. In other words, the molecules of solids are more tightly packed than of fluids.
It is not obvious from your question whether you are asking for a term which describes solid materials having a definite chemical makeup - which would be a chemical or a substance, although those terms would apply equally well to liquid or gas materials having a definite chemical makeup - or whether you are asking for examples, which would include such things as ice, marble, table salt, steel, copper, etc.
anything as long as it is not one of the four statements that define an mineral. -formed in nature - chemical makeup -cyrstal stucture -solid
Pressed powder makeup is the kind that's a little solid hunk of product in a container. Probably most of your makeup is pressed powder. How they make it: they first mix a powder base, like talc or mica, with pigments to give it color (they could leave the pigments out but no one would buy it without them) and other ingredients to help it stick to your skin better, feel better when you're wearing it or whatever other advantage they want their makeup to have. They also add a binder to allow it to stick together after it's been pressed. The product is then placed in its pan and put into a machine that presses the makeup with thousands of pounds of pressure. This makes the powder into a solid piece. The part of the press that touches the makeup can have different designs on it, like the company's logo, to make the product look fancier. Once that's done, it's put into the container and packaged for sale.
The change from solid gold to liquid gold is a physical change because it does not alter the chemical composition of the gold. The transition from solid to liquid is a result of a change in temperature and does not involve any chemical reactions.