Liquids are a state of matter with definite volume but no definite shape. Examples of liquids include water, milk, oil, and juice. Liquids can flow and take the shape of their container.
Obviously not. Many liquids are flammable.
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liquids can be purified buy filtering or sieving A2: Precipitation, Evaporation/condensation, Filtration, Centrifugation, and Flocculation are all methods for purifying liquids.
liquid o2 has no hydrogen in it so not all liquids have water in them
Yes, liquids have a fixed volume but not a fixed shape. They take the shape of their container due to their ability to flow and assume the shape of the space they occupy.
All liquids are fluid and lack a crystalline order.
The negation of "some drinks are not liquids" is "all drinks are liquids." This statement asserts that every drink is a liquid.
(Disregarding gases) All solutions are liquids but not all liquids are solutions.
(Disregarding gases) All solutions are liquids but not all liquids are solutions.
(Disregarding gases) All solutions are liquids but not all liquids are solutions.
Yes, that is a physical property of all liquids.
Not all liquids are flammable. Some liquids that are flammable are gasoline, alcohol, oil. Liquids like water are not flammable.
all metals can liquids at certain temperature mercury is a classical example of a liquids metal
Obviously not. Many liquids are flammable.
No, all liquids are not the same. Liquids can have different properties such as density, viscosity, and surface tension which make them unique from one another. Additionally, liquids can have varying chemical compositions and phase states which further distinguish them.
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The most common property of all liquids is that they have a definite volume but take the shape of their container. This characteristic allows liquids to flow and adapt to the shape of the container they are in.