No. I think you may be confusing the change in the state of H2O (solid,liquid, vapor) with the actual concept of losing mass.
In this question you are confusing two forms of measurement - one of height and one of mass.
Their ability to run fast, and their stripes act as a confusing mass to a predator when they are conglomerating in a herd.
'was confusing' is past continuous'is confusing' is present simple continuous'is going to be confusing' is future continuous
comparative more confusing, superlative most confusing
Which is confusing to the reader
More confusing
Here are some sentences.That is a confusing argument.Stop confusing me with your lies.
What is cacl2ything? Molar mass of CaCl2 is 111 g/mol Best guess for an answer to your confusing question is 4.79 x 10-2 mole x 111 g/mole = 5.3169 grams
opposite of most confusing
The word 'confusing' is the present participle of the verb to confuse (confuses, confusing, confused).The noun form for the verb to confuse are confusability, confusion, and the gerund (present participle of the verb), confusing.
It sounds as if you are confusing the holocaust (genocide and mass murder of Jews, Gypsies, political opponents and other by the Nazis) with World War 2.