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Q: What does 14K TCH mean on the inside of a ring?
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What is marijuana TCH?

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I am Avery small person not a heavy smoker how do you get weed out of your system?

TCH is the chemical in weed that drug tests test for. Luckily for you TCH is stored in fat cells within the body, so the less fat a person is the less time TCH stays in your body. The best way to get TCH out of your system is to work out hard for a couple of days (burning fat) and to drink alot of water (flushes your system). If it makes you feel any better I smoked a lot of weed and then stopped for a drug test. I worked out hard for 8 days straight and drank water until it hurt. I passed the drug test no problem.


Do Acids react with compounds containing hydroxide ions to form water and salt?

bi tch no


How far back does the urine drug test detect?

It depends on the drug. An immunoassay for TCH, for example, may show traces for up to four weeks or longer, depending on the amounts used, weight of the user, and a couple of other factors. Others vary as well, generally below that length of time. A quantitative analysis, however, will determine how much is still in the system, and can be used to determine within certain limits how long since use occurred. THC (Marijuana) is stored in fat, and takes a long time to be released.


What is a mixture that is not uniform in composition?

A heterogeneous mixture is a mixture of things that can be clearly seen as separate. For example, oil droplets in water, peas in a bowl of soup,Oil in water is also an example of an immiscible solution because the two fluids will not ever mix, you can try to mix oil+water if you shake them vigorously enough and they will then look homogeneous and cloudy for a few seconds, but then they separate again.A homogeneous mixture is one in which the different components are so thoroughly mixed that they cannot be visibly distinguished. For example, proteins and water in a glass of milk, most acids in water, the air we breath, petrol, to name a few.What is "visibly distinguishable" in a mixture depends on your point of view of course: at a fine enough magnification all mixtures will seem heterogeneous, and at a coarse enough resolution all mixtures will look homogeneous.

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