perforation
Because the fibers that make up the paper are wet and slide apart easier
These are basic conversions of energy. When you tear the paper, you do work which is converted to sound energy and probably some heat energy. The same concept applies to breaking a glass.
Tearing a piece of paper is a physical change.
Rotational Inertia keeps the roll from spinning while the paper is ripped therefore it is easier to tear it.
A full roll is very sturdy, while a mostly used roll is more fragile. Therefore, when you go to pull the paper off the full roll, it comes off easily without you having to steady the roll...but if you want to tear paper off a mostly used roll, you'll have to hold the roll down before you tear it off so the roll doesn't fall. Basically, because a full roll is sturdier than a mostly used roll.
on the left side of the paper there are holes. near the third hole the page will tear. follow the tear. you don't have to click
Because the fibers that make up the paper are wet and slide apart easier
credit card statement
Tear. As in I will tear that paper. Not the tear that involves crying.
Those are your tear ducts!
Due to the way paper is made, its fibers tend to run in one direction. If you tear in that direction, along the fibers, the paper tears easily, and the fibers guide the tear to be straight across. If you tear the paper across the fibers, all of the above is untrue.
Tear, as in to tear some paper, has the past tense of tore.
When dogs tear anything at all, it's usually because they are bored and need/want something to play with. Paper and other items that make some type of noise are often what they'll first go after.
"Ver-tear": "Ver" as in "very" and "tear" as in "tear the paper up"
its a type of disease that make animals go crazy at zoos and animals pase back and forth also they tear holes in their skin.
Yes, just be careful what type of glue you are using because it might make the decoupage paper bubble or tear from the wetness.
pperferation