Particulates are tiny subdivisions of solid matter suspended in a gas or liquid. Sources of particulate matter can be man made or natural like Air pollution and water pollution can take the form of solid particulate matter. Particulates is a complex mixture of extremely small particles and liquid droplets.
Something in the form of particles.
Protons, neutrons and electrons
I imagine you are thinking of the neutron.
greater surface are to volume ratio for a start which leads to faster dissolving particule theory: more collisions. there are more small pieces of sugar to collide in icing than granular
i found the easiest way is to go to a car stereo store and buy the wire harness which will plug into you car's wiring system and be matched to the wiring system for a stereo for a particule make and model ,,,about $29. Canadian funds And additionally - doing it this way doesn't void your warranty.
why bone is important
Yes, this is quite comment to cats, as they can get closely attached to other kittens, and her instinks to tell her to feed and nurse other kittens when needed!AnswerYes it's very commen, a female cat will nurse other kittens, but wont clean them due to its particule sent that is of its birth mother! Answeryes AnswerYa, that happened to me, and my friends. It's werid they just feed them, and ot clean them. We thought she was sick, and took her to the vet, but the vet said it was normal. it is very common , you can see this in wild cats that live in big groups when a female gives birth other females will nurse her kittens and help her , it is amazing.
That depends on the type of matter. Say, for example, the matter is a chair that you are moving. Then the matter would move in the direction in which you are pushing (or pulling, throwing, etc). If you define matter as a particule (such as an atom), then it would depend on the type of particle. Different particles move in different ways, depending on the type. If you are asking about particules moving as a smaller, less substantial unit (such as a neuronal transmission) then the pattern would be linear. But the broad answer really is that it depends on the type of matter.
I'm not quite sure what the question means. When something (a solute) is fully dissolved in a liquid (a solvent), the size of the particles are the size of the molecules of the solute. In other words, when something dissolved, what exists in solution is individual and separate molecules. A molecule is on the order of a few angstroms (tenths of a nanometer). That's small. Very small.If you are asking about the size of the particles before it has dissolved, then the size is completely irrelevant to how much will dissolve. The size will affect how FAST it dissolves, but not how MUCH dissolves. How much dissolves, or if it dissolves at all, is an inherent property of the solute and solvent you are using. You have no control over that if you need a specific solute/solvent combination (although higher temperature often increases the solubility of things -- but not always).
Sorry but phrasal verbs are not used in French. And it would be too complicated to explain each case.Phrasal verbs in English are composed of a verb, giving the "action", and a particule which gives the verb a "spatial" and/or "negative" or "positive" sense.Off is often "negative"In French, this sense is given either in the verb itself,He took off his shoes - il retira ses chaussures.I paid off all my debts - J'ai réglé toutes mes dettes.I called off the meeting : j'ai annulé la réunion.To switch off (an electric device ...) - éteindreCome off it - Arrête çà !!or with a verb accompanied by an adverbThe negociations broke off. Les négociations ont été brutalement interrompues.Moreover, the context can change the sense :for example, To be off can bes'en allerI'm off - je m'en vaisAvoir arrêterShe's off drugs - Elle a arrêté la drogue (she stopped the drugs)There are so many different cases it is impossible to list them all
add the terms "ne" (or n') + "pas" - (the form is n' when the following auxiliary verb begins by a vowel sound)passé composé // negativeje suis allé, tu es allé, nous sommes allés (I went, you went, we went) // je ne suis pas allé, tu n'es pas allé, nous ne sommes pasallésj'ai couru, (I ran) // je n'ai pas couruje l'ai suivi (I followed him) // je ne l'ai passuivitu as aimé (you loved - you liked) // tu n'as pasaiméil a fini (he finished) // il n'a pas fini