No. helium is released in outer air but does not lose or change its chemical formula
Physical change
That is a physical change.
Yes.
for a state change to happen it must lose or gain or loose kinetic energy
No. helium is released in outer air but does not lose or change its chemical formula
If you mean to your friends, you will lose friends and they will also be mean to you.
To lose your excitement
No, you will not lose your rooms if you change the style of your Moshi Monsters house.
She tends to loosely hold onto things, making it easy for her to lose track of them.
Materials lose their original properties when their spatial conditions change, provided their atomic configuration change.
One way to use "loose" and "lose" in the same sentence is: "Be careful not to lose the keychain that has a loose connection."
"Loose" is an adjective describing something not tight or securely fixed, like "Her shoelaces are loose." "Lose" is a verb indicating the act of failing to win or misplacing something, such as "Don't lose your keys."
You lose heat.
To lose
Lose is the opposite of win. If someone says "you lose," they mean you didn't win.
To falter can mean to lose momentum if you falter while striving towards an end goal. But you could also falter as in lose strength.