Water
H2o
A liquid compound that vaporizes readily at room temperature is called a volatile liquid. An example of this would be gasoline or rubbing alcohol
No, a liquid cannot be a compound. A compound is a substance composed of two or more elements chemically bonded together, while a liquid is a state of matter with particles that are free to move past each other. The term "liquid" describes the physical state of certain compounds or elements.
liquid or water
Water (H2O) is the most common liquid compound on Earth.
No, Liquid Nails will not stick to joint compound
Water is an example of a liquid, a compound composed of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom, and a universal solvent.
Yes. "Molten" means the compound has melted into the liquid state. Anything that heat has melted into a liquid can be described as molten.
Milk is a liquid.
vegetable oil, is a compound because it forms a liquid.
A compound is where the elemental components are chemically bonded at the molecular level and can only be separated with great effort (not evaporation). The liquid could have been a mixture (hard water for example; water with minerals, fluoride, calcium, salt whatever) and the dissolved minerals left behind when the liquid evaporated. However the liquid itself could be a compound (such as pure water) but the fact it left behind 'impurities' when it evaporated means it became a mixture or colloid when the impurities mixed into the liquid. So if the container was completely clean when the liquid was put in and there was no possibility of impurities being introduced from the air or other sources, it was a mixture before it evaporated.
At room temperature, water is a liquid compound. At 0 oC it freezes into a solid, and at 100 oC it vaporizes into a gas.