You might describe glass that way.
Window panes in the oldest buildings are thicker at the bottom than at the top, because the glass in them has flowed over the centuries.
Here's something to think about:
Ever since I heard this fact about ancient window panes, I've wondered: How can you measure the thickness of a window that's set in a wall, where you can't open the window and you certainly don't want to break it ?
An example of a solid to a liquid is ice melting into water.
a soolid is changed into a liquid by when the solid melts like for example ice it is a solid and then when it melts it is a liquid
It is a solid.
Gas in atmosphere: argon Liquid in atmosphere: water (as rain) Solid in atmosphere: dust
(different ;)) the molecules are more tightly packed in a solid. an example of a sold is a TV an example of liquid is lemonaide
ice which then melts to become water. solid to liquid.
An aloy is an example of a homogenous (metallic) solid mixture.
gold in Mercury liquid
Sawdust is a solid.
Sand in water is an example of a heterogeneous solid in a liquid. The sand particles do not dissolve in water and can be seen as separate entities within the liquid.
for example ice is melted down into a liquid
There are three classic states of matter: solid, liquid, and gas. An example of a liquid is lemonade, an example of a solid is a book, and an example of a gas is nitric oxide.