Yes, it's a verb.
Sand and sugar are two examples of solids that can be poured easily. When poured, their small particles flow and settle into molds or containers, taking the shape of the surface they are poured onto.
Liquids such as water, juice, milk, and oil, as well as granular substances like sugar, salt, and sand, can be poured. Additionally, powders like flour or spices can also be poured.
A liquid is a substance that can be poured and takes the shape of its container.
"liquids"
A gas or a liquid.
No, "poured" is not a preposition. It is a verb that describes the action of pouring.
Poured is a verb. It's the past tense of pour.
"Poured" is a verb, not a noun. A common noun is a general, non-specific person, place, or thing, like "dog" or "city."
"Prediceatice" is not a word, so this answer assumes you meant "predicate". The subject of "The workers poured more concrete" is "workers", and the predicate (verb) is "poured". "Concrete" is the direct object.
The homophone for "pored" is "poured."
actually a gas can be contained in a container, basicly being poured, so plasma can be poured. YES
gravity pulls the water down when it is poured
He got a glass and poured out a drink of water for himself.
pour - past: poured; past participle: poured
Sand and sugar are two examples of solids that can be poured easily. When poured, their small particles flow and settle into molds or containers, taking the shape of the surface they are poured onto.
She poured a very expensive perfume all over her body before the party.He poured more milk into his cup.
tamara'a mother poured sugar into the bowl