All will hit the floor at the same time.
No, though it would be challenging to get up every last scrap of glass to prove it!
If you are talking about a house, the attic would be on the third floor as you have a ground floor (first floor), then a second floor (upstairs) and then a third floor (the attic), However if it was a bungalow, it would be on the second floor because bungalow's don't have an upstairs.
What in America is called the 'first floor' is called the 'ground floor' in Britain. The floor immediately above that is the 'first floor', what Americans would call the 'second floor'.
IDK...but who would make a road of glass...it would pop all your tires...it would be a very stupid idea.
The first glass ornament that needs to be found would be jesus or and angel!
It would be possible for a .22 bullet to brake the first pane and not damage the second. I would expect to find signs of a bullet hole in the broken pane. But it depends on the temper of the glass. High tempered glass will shatter. You usually find these in sliding doors. I knicked one and it cracked over the entire door. WIthin the hour it was a heap of broken glass on the floor. It is possible.
A glass will not break when it falls onto a carpet because the carpet provides a softer, more forgiving surface that absorbs the impact energy, reducing the force exerted on the glass. In contrast, a marble floor is hard and rigid, which means it does not absorb much energy; when the glass hits this surface, the force is concentrated on the glass, often leading to breakage. The cushioning effect of the carpet prevents the glass from reaching the critical stress point that would cause it to shatter.
Magic eraser may do it. I would dampen first and not much pressure at first as it may affect floor's finish.
Glass mosaic are really complex structures. If the mosaic will be placed on the floor the best way to attach it to the ground is by using concrete. In case the mosaic will be placed on a wall the best method to use would be glass glue.
It depends on whether you are in America or Britain - Americans start numbering with the ground floor being called the first story, so the second story is the second floor from the ground. However, in the UK, the ground floor is the first story so that the second story would be the first floor above the ground.
yer well in a shakepearean thetre there were 3 levels. ground, first floor and second floor. on the first floor there were the peasents and servants i.e. the poor. on the second floor there would be people who worked and earned a decent salary, and on the top floor there were the lords, and counts. kings and/or the leader/mayor would sit in the side wings becausew it was the place with the best view and the least smells
Would have to see a picture of it first