The sand will fill up and burst
he mentions his experience on the beach with the sieve and the sand because later on as faber is talking to montag. while he is on the train, montag is reading the words on the page over and over again because they are not staying in his head. the words are the sand and the sieve is his brain(memory maybe). his current problem? there are quite a few in the novel so you might have to be a little more specific with that one. :)
You can sift flour using a sieve.
collect, combine
Sieved is the correct spelling.
Moon sand can be formed when it is put in water because it is waterproof. While it is unknown who the first person was to make it, it was first referred to in 1915.
Sand and gold are separated by a sieve. You put the sand in with he gold and shake it. Than the sand falls throuh the holes of the sieve leaving behind he gold.
Put it through a sieve
you need to put it through a sieve
Yes you can sieve sand.
Put the mixture in water and wait for all of the salt to dissolve. Then filter out the sand and wait for the water to evaporate in the sand/water solution to get the sand and salt separately.
Wash the pebbles and sand in a sieve. This will wash through the sand and keep the larger pebbles in the sieve.
Pour the mixture through a sieve. The salt and sand will fall through the sieve, leaving just the stones. Then put the sand-salt mixture in water. Stir it until the salt is completely dissolved. Then pour it through a filter. The sand will remain in the filter, and the dissolved salt will pass through.
You would likely use a sieve and sift the material. The holes in the sieve can let the sand out while holding the stones and pebbles. If you don't have a sieve, you can put them in a container and shake the container. The larger items end up on top and you can pick them out by hand.
As long as the particles of sand and pebbles are of different size, you can separate them using a sieve (sifter). The smaller sand particles will pass through the sieve whereas the pebble molecules will not. This is the process that occurs in sifters sold as children's toys.
With a sieve.
A fine sieve.
With a sieve I think.