the answer is bubbles are found in liquids.................
The bubbles in lemonade which are most likely CO2 rise to the surface, because they are less dense ( lighter) than the lemonade mixture, so that is why bubbles rise.
Because inside a bubble there is air which is carbondioxide which is a gas
Because you boil the water inside the stove.
lemonade is a liquid even tough its fizzy there ingredients they have put in the lemonde to make it fizz
It is a gas (carbon dioxide). That is why it is called a carbonated liquid.
liquid not solid or gas
Marshamallow is a gas and a solid cause it has a shape and it contains many bubbles in it.
Sure... give me a Coca Cola on ice.. Solid (ice), liquid (coke), gas (the bubbles in the coke)
Yes. Americans will often refer to the liquid fuel gasoline as "gas" for short, which might be confusing to residents of other countries. It is often known outside the U.S. as "petrol."
Marshamallow is a gas and a solid cause it has a shape and it contains many bubbles in it.
There are three classic states of matter: solid, liquid, and gas. An example of a liquid is lemonade, an example of a solid is a book, and an example of a gas is nitric oxide.
If you mean Coca-Cola, and the like, it is a liquid with gas bubbles in it. Some other uses of the word soda would result in the answer solid.
If you mean Coca-Cola, and the like, it is a liquid with gas bubbles in it. Some other uses of the word soda would result in the answer solid.
It has all three. It is a solid until it dissolves in water, then as a liquid it gives off gas bubbles.
The can itself is a solid. The drink inside is a liquid with gas bubbles dissolved in it.