Smooth is what it feels like; square and tan are what it looks like - those would all be physical properties of the substance.
physical properties (APEX)
Chemical properties
Pointy and smooth
A simple object such as a desk has multiple physical properties. First, a desk is a solid. Second a desk has measurable mass. Color and odor are also physical properties to this object.
3 physical properties of a banana are that it is yellow, its shape is usually curvy, and that it feels kind of smooth. Remember: physical properties are things that you can observe without changing the matter.
Boron does not have a surface, at least not in the sense that you probably would know it. Boron is a chemical element. While chemical elements do have extensive physical properties (e.g. mass, volume), an atom of any chemical element is so small that the rules of physics as we know them do not adequately apply to/describe it. One could make a pun on quantum superposition and say that an atom of boron is both smooth and rough until you observe it, which is to say that, since matter has both wavelike and particle-like properties, until it is observed, it may or may not be 'smooth' or 'rough.'
The physical properties that I know are colour (ex: black, white, greenish- yellow, red), texture (ex: fine, coarse, smooth, gritty), odour (ex: odourless, spicy, sharp, burnt), state (ex: solid, liquid, and gas), lustre(ex: shiny, dull), clarity (clear, cloudy, opaque is something that can not see through something), and taste(sweet, sour, salty, bitter).
it a smooth wood
it is smooth and takes no form
it is very soft and smooth
Pointy and smooth
Rubber is light,smooth and rubbery.
Rubber is light,smooth and rubbery.
idk but i do know that iit looks smooth and wavey and has small holes in it
its strong, soft and smooth, and strong
redishbrown rough yet smooth
Raspy is referred to as rough.
It isn't.... take water for example it isn't "smooth" or "shiny" but has reflective properties
Each bone has a tough, smooth, shiny substance that covers the end. This substance that covers the ends of bones is called cartilage.