The melting point of gold is 1 064,18 oC.
Rusty can change the gold from a solid to a liquid by heating it to its melting point, which is around 1,064 degrees Celsius (1,947 degrees Fahrenheit). Once the gold has reached its melting point, it will turn into a liquid state and he can then pour it into bars or any desired mold for shaping.
If it happens to be Midas-22, it's worth quite a chunk of change.
There is no logical or scientific reason why a chunk of ice a billion kilometers away will change human behavior more than antarctica does.
An asteroid-sized chunk of rock with a tail would be a comet.
Words like gravel and ripck aren't just nouns they come with an implied definition of size. Without being to exact:Pebble - A chunk of stone which is ore or less marble sizedStone - A chunk of stone in the size range of tennis balls, Oranges or your fistRock - A chunk of stone big enough o make you think about getting a friend to help you lift it.Boulder - A chunk of rock which stays where it is unless you have heavy equipmentBased on this, as a piece of gravel is about the size of a marble (you can hold several pieces of gravel once) it is a pebble, not a rock. Both may be ,ade of the same type of stone and a hamer can change a rock into pebbles.
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Chunk of Change was created on 2008-09-16.
physical change because it is melting and it would be the same mass as it waas as a chunk of ice
Change in this context means the money that is left after you buy something. A chunk is another term for a thick, solid amount of something.This idiom means a large amount of money.
Chunk-a-chunk Big chunck Chunk-a-chunk Big chunk Open wide for Chunky!
there wasn't any need
Not necessarily, if the 3 dimensional shape is a solid like a chunk of rock (with no cavity or hollow portion) it cannot contain liquid. There needs to be a cavity in the 3 dimensional shape.
No. The modern symbol for Corrosives is a test tube pouring liquid on a hand with a large chunk missing (presumably corroded away).
No. A big asteroid hit the Earth and broke off a chunk of it early in Earth's history. That chunk became the moon. The same collision is responsible for the tilt in Earth's axis that causes the seasons to change.
I asked my friend for a chunk of his Swiss chocolate.
Chunk Colbert died in 1874.
If it happens to be Midas-22, it's worth quite a chunk of change.
Yes, the moon was a chunk of Earth