pretty much everything has a melting point where it turns into a liquid, and if it gets hot enough it evaporates and becomes a gas. it depends on the amount of heat it takes to melt the substance. some things can become a gas but they are not seen as gases because it's never hot enough to be turned into a gas.
All material things (except helium ... no solid form known - yet).
All solid and liquid particles vibrate or move except at absolute zero when they theoretically come to a complete stop due to minimal energy.
The term that means all the liquid and solid water on Earth is "hydrosphere."
Water can be all three ... solid = ice liquid = water gas = steam
Water is a substance that can exist in all three states of matter: solid (ice), liquid (water), and gas (water vapor).
water Water is a gas when it is steam. It condenses to liquid, becoming water. It becomes solid when it freezes, and then becomes liquid again as it melts. The entire process depends on temperature. The molecular structure of water does not change throughout all these changes.
H2O is water. It can be all three. As a solid, it is ice. As a liquid, it is water in the sense of bottled water. As a gas it is water vapor (an example of water vapor is steam).
Water. It can be found as liquid water, ice, and steam.
Solid. Mercury is a metal and is liquid in it's natural state.
H2O is water, it can be a liquid, a gas or a solid (ice).
The solid state of water is less dense than its liquid state, which is why ice floats on water. The solid state of nearly all other substances is more dense than the liquid state and sinks in the liquid state.
Water is the only substance that can be found naturally in all three states: solid (ice), liquid (water), and gas (water vapor).