Do you mean the actual glass itself is warm or the water inside? If the water is warm then its a glass of warm water What is the noun you want to modify -- the glass or the water? It's hard to imagine a warm glass containing cold water, but I suppose it's possible.
The correct spelling is "pour"
Yes, "He poured water into the glass." is a grammatically correct sentence as long as the first word is capitalized and there is a period at the end.
That is the correct spelling of the colloquial phrase "as warm as toast" (comfortably warm).
The spelling "toasty" is correct (warm, snug).
Salt water is correct.
When warm water makes a cold glass crack it contracts.
The ice will begin melting and will cool the warm water.
It Melt Bcuz The water is Warm So it Melts The Ice && Then The Coldness Make the Warm Water Cold
Water droplets form when the water vapor cools. The cooling causes it to condense into water. A warm glass does not cause cooling or condensation, so no water droplets.
It depends If the water is cold and the temp of glass don;t matter than it is glass of cold water If the glass is cold and the temp of the water don't matter than it is cold glass of water People normally use glass of cold water
Evaporation.
If warm moist air comes into contact with the cold outer surface of a glass of water, condensation takes place.
Because the water is probably warm enough to melt the ice in the water.
Cover it with a thick lid.
Yes, a smaller glass of water would be easier to warm up because of the smaller volumn.
Put luke-warm water on it. Boiling water will crack glass.
The process is called condensation, the ice water touching the glass causes the glass to cool and which causes the water vapour in the air to condense on the outside of the glass.