Water is a liquid between 0 oC and 100 oC.
Water molecules are linked by hydrogen bonds.
the bonds between the water molecules are broken
that's easy, the answer is a liquid . evidence to support my answer is found in the bp and fp of the subsatnce. the fp of the substane is o degrees or under the bp is 100 derees or over, so to be a solid it has to be under the fp to be a gas it has to be over the mp but anything between is a liquid as it hasent reached eather its fp or mp , and so as 65 degrees is in between it is in a state known as liquid , answered by chloe harris , 14 yrs old , st.cenydd school
The different between ice and water is that ice is solid and water is liquid. Under standard pressure, water exists in the solid form as ice when its temperature is below 0° Celsius (32° F). It exists in liquid form between 0° and 100° Celsius.
Water
This depends on the miscibility between this liquid and water.
Water is a liquid between 0 oC and 100 oC.
Steam and vapor are in the form of a gas. Liquid water is in the form of a liquid.
Air is a gas and water is a liquid.
water is a liquid, steam is a gas
Water is a liquid and Gas is a gas
Liquid bromine is the Real Bromine, while Bromine water is a mixture of Bromine and Water
well gas vapour is basically water from evaporation and the liquid water is just normal water
Water takes the state of liquid (water) between 0 and 100 degrees celsius.
they are diffrent
they are diffrent