Couse it is!
Frogs are not colloids, they are amphibians.
milk
yes
As thickeners and rheology modifiers but they are also used in resin production as a stabilizer. The resin is then used as the binder in the paint.
Yes
Blood is the best example of a solution, as it is composed of a solvent (plasma) and solutes (such as red and white blood cells, platelets, and proteins) that are uniformly distributed throughout. Sea water, milk, and paint are colloids or suspensions, which do not meet the strict definition of a solution.
After my opinion they are not colloids.
Sometimes is possible, depending on the type of the coloid; for example aerosols.
Gelatin (jelly, jell-o), shaving cream, whipped cream.
The 3 types of colloidal system are: 1. Lyophilic colloids 2. Lyophobic colloids 3. Association colloids
Yes, soapsuds are considered colloids. They are formed when soap molecules surround and trap air or gas bubbles in water, creating a stable dispersion. This is a typical example of a colloidal system.
An example of how people use colloids every day is when some one drinks juice when it says shake well. That means that it contains something that does not dissolve in water and sits on the bottom.