If you're talking absorbency, it takes in the water (and water has mass, so it will grow larger, just as your stomach grows just after a meal). If you're not talking absorbency, for example an air-filled balloon under water, the size will change the deeper you go because of the pressure. Pressure affects density, so the size will fluctuate depending on the pressure/density.
No, you say bigger......something is bigger
A common example is a balloon: when you take air from a pump and fill the balloon, it expands and gets bigger. Similarly, when you water a plant, it absorbs the water and grows larger over time. Both illustrate the concept of taking something (air or water) that causes an increase in size or volume.
Something Bigger - 2012 was released on: USA: 23 March 2012
If you make something bigger you enlarge it.
A garage is something bigger than your car but smaller than your house.
a gram is like 106 or something bigger than a microgram. gram is way bigger.
When something gets bigger, it means that its size, volume, or dimensions increase. This can be due to growth, inflation, expansion, or enlargement.
4th's are bigger as something divided into only 4 pieces means the pieces are bigger, compared to something divided into 7 smaller pieces.
Bigger balls
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A chair, a desk, a computer, a tree, a water bottle, a gluestick, a camera...most ordinary objects. Its actually quite obvious.
No, corks will not get bigger if left in water. Cork is a natural material that is resistant to water absorption, so it will not expand in size when submerged in water.