Mixing it with milk
Of course, the only problem is with some fizzy soft drinks they still tend to go flat.
Carbonated beverages will go flat overnight if uncovered. Bottles with a cap last longer, but will also loose some of their umf.
Semen and viginal juice
It is not the carbonation in soft drinks that is bad for your teeth, but the sugar. The sugar in energy drinks, soda, and even Lemonade gets into the gum. Over time it can cause cavities and even go into your blood stream causing blood clots and heart failures.
if it doesent have a top on it
Yes, chocolate in large amounts can be a diuretic (makes your stool soft or runny).
I think these causes most of the water borne diseases like diarrhoea.more over dysentry ,jaundice like diseases are caused.these are mostly immitaed variety made of contaminated water and harmful colour.
The fizz in soft drinks is carbonation. That is, the addition of CO2 (carbon dioxide) gas. Carbon dioxide readily disperses in an oxygen atmosphere (ours) so simply leaving a soft drink open will cause it to "go flat." However, some containers, usually plastic ones, have small amounts of porous material that allow for a slight leakage of pressure. Many beverage container companies call this "breathing." When the containers age they breathe out the CO2 and breathe in oxygen. Flat again. One of the things that accelerates this breathing is temperature. If you take a beverage container and move it from cold to warm and back again, several times, the change in temperature forces pressure changes that will dramatically accelerate breathing. Flat, flat, flat. Incidentally, there are CO2 dispensers out there (called home fountains) that will add the fizz back to flat drinks or even carbonate anything you want. Check it out.
yes it is because a sports drink has antioxidants and vitamins to give you energy to be more active such as gatorade, powerade, ect. however a carbonated drink has sugar and other things that go against the nutrients that your body needs.
In alot of places you can go in at 18 I think it is up to the bar owner if they want that liability.
no but it makes souffles flatten
no, it just looks longer because the heat from the iron makes it go flat by that it decreases the frizz and makes it stay down