Type your answer here... Yes Jonny's big fat dirty teeth that dribble like a sweating mongy. And his big greasy head and dirty spots.
Puffing it up makes it less dense. Anything less dense than water can float on water, and anything more dense than water will sink.
Water has a density of 1 - therefore anything that sinks in water (e.g. iron with a density of 7.874) has a density higher than 1 and anything that floats in water has density less than 1.
Water is used as the base reference, and it has a value of 1. Anything less dense than water is expressed in numbers smaller than 1 (.71) for example. Anything denser than water is expressed in numbers greater than 1 (2.7).
Salt water is more buoyant than fresh water is, because salt water is slightly more dense. -- Anything that floats in salt water will float higher than it does in fresh water. -- Anything that sinks in salt water will sink slower than it does in fresh water. -- Anything that just barely floats in salt water may possibly sink in fresh water.
Water is about 5 times more dense than charcoal. Charcoal floats. (Anything less dense than water floats. More dense than water, it sinks in water)
when you are in, you are in and wet. That is it.
that's a matter of opinion :)
'Brasilia is wetter than Stockholm' is correct English.
It was wetter outside today than it was yesterday. The brown dog's nose was wetter than the black dog's nose. Dogs' noses can be wetter or drier without being ill.
some parts of the u is wetter than others because its wetter
water
Water is not evaporated faster than anything.
Water Country USA's motto is 'The Wetter the Better!'.
it depends on the climate
It colder
A towel gets wetter and wetter as it dries.
Using water is an example, anything that is less dense than water will float on water. Anything that is denser than water will sink in water.