same thing the other guy said, a sponge
No, I dont think water can have holes in it. It is a luiquid. When you put your hand in water and take it back out it looks like there has been nothing in it.
But i also suppose if you were to look at all the separate particles it would have holes. The particles are not to far apart not as close as a solid but not as far as a gas.
So i suppose water can have holes in ti with lots of separate particles. I hope this was help. (Im only 12 this was the best answer i could give you)
Sponges!
Colander
a sponge
a sponge
Cold water can hold more dissolved gasses than hot water, though that does not necessarily mean anything about the amount of dissolved gas actually present in a given sample.
A penny is a solid, flat object and does not hold much water at all.
Centrifuges use centripetal force to separate substances in liquid or gas suspension. For example, if a test tube filled with muddy water is put into a centrifuge - a device with a wheel on a spindle with holes that hold several test tubes - and then spun around for a while, the water will separate from the dirt suspended in it.
by blocking a standard water pipe
a sponge
a sponge. :)
a sponge holds water because of its holes
a human?
If something doesn't hold water, it is full of holes. If an argument doesn't hold water, then it's full of logic holes. In other words, it's not holding up as a logical argument.
A sponge.
a sponge
Not water, but freshwater, though this is very important. And the number is even larger than 75%.
"To hold water," meaning to be believable, is usually said of explanations or theories, not of ideas in general. Valid theories "hold water" because they have no "holes" in them.
a sponge
Yes. If the recent charges are bad enough even if DOC doesn't hold you.
sponge