By boiling point, the person probably means the temperature that the liquid mentionned has to get to (with a normal pressure) in order to transform into a gas. For example, water has to be heated to 100'C at normal pressure in order to boil off as steam.
Um, what do you mean?
Boiling point is the temperature at which a liquid changes into a gas. Freezing point is the temperature at which a liquid changes into a solid.
It means boiling points are hot and freezing points are cold.
Weathers boiling point?.... if you mean rain, its water so .. 100 degrees?..
It is impossible to 'attract' any boiling point (whatever that may mean):Boiling point is a physical property of a particular liquid compound depending on pressure.
it mean a scale of hot water boiling
Boiling is the phase where the boiling occurs. The point at which the boiling occurs is the boiling point.
options (A) Boiling point (b) Colour (C) Smell (D) Solubility in water.
If you mean ammonia, the melting point of ammonia is −77.73 °C, and its boiling point is −33.34 °C. (Wikipedia)
The boiling point of freshwater is lower than the boiling point of saltwater.
there is no boiling point
Melting (freezing) point: the temperature when the solid metal become a liquid. Boiling point: the temperature when the liquid metal become a gas.