Yes.
salt crystals insidle tthe substance
When they react, carbon dioxide is produced. The fizzing is due to the bubbling carbon dioxide gas.
Nothing happen
Many rocks match that description. Try putting some vinegar on it. If it reacts with any bubbling, it is probably limestone.
you fill your bathtub with a warm water then you just put the pearls in and relax (they disolve)
No, they are not similar.
People have been sniffing them to get a cocaine like high. Its like synthetic weed but instead cocaine. And up till now its just been called bath salts when sold.
Bubbling Brown Sugar was created in 1976.
Bubbling Over - film - was created in 1934.
In the sentence "The bubbling brook's babble is soothing," "The bubbling brook's babble" is the subject and "is soothing" is the predicate. The subject is what the sentence is about, and the predicate provides information about the subject.
Yes it is reversible, for example bubbling something on the gas or reversible you can just turn the gas off. So bubbling something is reversible.