of Freeze, Tending to freeze; for freezing; hence, cold or distant in manner.
freezing chilly ice cold
Yes Freezingly is a Word. Meaning It's Very Cold Out and You are freezing!
It's the change of a liquid to a solid using low temperatures.
super-cooled liquid
Yes, it is possible for the dew point to be below freezing. Dew point is the temperature at which air becomes saturated with moisture and condensation forms. If the air is very dry, the dew point can be below freezing, meaning that the air is not saturated with enough moisture for condensation to occur at temperatures above freezing.
Well, I did an experiment in class on this question. We used different amounts lauric acid and it turned out that the freezing point was pretty much the same for all the samples. So, in all, the freezing point does not depend on the mass of a substance.
Freezing is used as an adjective (it's freezing, freezing temperatures) or in the noun freezing point. Whilst freezing points is the plural of freezing point, the word freezing itself has no plural form
Cold: chilly, frigid Icy: freezing, frosty Cool: brisk, refreshing Nippy: brisk, chilly
No because physical states of matter changes are physical changes. they are not chemical changing meaning it is still alcohol, just frozen.
A freezing point change can also be referred to as a depression of the freezing point. This phenomenon occurs when a solute is added to a solvent, lowering the temperature at which the solvent transitions from a liquid to a solid. It is a colligative property, meaning it depends on the number of solute particles in the solution rather than their identity.
the result of freezing and thawing and freezing is frost boil
The word that completes the analogy is "slip." The relationship between "cold" and "freezing" indicates a progression in temperature, while "lapse" and "slip" share a similar meaning related to a gradual decline or mistake. Thus, just as "freezing" represents an extreme of "cold," "slip" represents an extreme of "lapse."