It depends on what is in the cup, if you talking about the cup its self, then it is a solid.
The cup is solid, but the water remains liquid unless you freeze it into ice.
A cup is a solid object made of materials like glass, ceramic, or plastic. While it can hold liquids or gases within it, the cup itself is not liquid or gas.
WATER! If you put water in a cup and leave it in the freezer it will turn to an ice cube then if you leave it somewhere warm and cosy it will turn back to a liquid again. Try it for yourself even.
The general classes of colloids are sols (solid particles dispersed in a liquid), gels (cross-linked networks of solid particles dispersed in a liquid), and emulsions (liquid droplets dispersed in another liquid).
Ice is a solid and when melted it turns into a liquid freeze it again and it is solid
The cup is solid, but the water remains liquid unless you freeze it into ice.
solid
A cup is a solid object made of materials like glass, ceramic, or plastic. While it can hold liquids or gases within it, the cup itself is not liquid or gas.
This depends on what you are measuring. There is "Dry Cup"(a cup of a solid material) and "Liquid cup" (cup of a fluid or liquid). However, a cup (dry or liquid) is classified as a measurement of volume. 1 cup = 250 milliliters or 8.80 liquid ounces
new Q already made
9 ounces of a solid ingredient would be equivalent to 1 cup when measured in a liquid measuring cup.
There are 8 fluid ounces in a cup, but solid ounces can vary depending on the density of the food. It is best to use a kitchen scale for accurate measurements when dealing with solid ingredients.
a solid is a hard piece of something which particles are stuck together but shake an u cant poor a solid out from a cup like a liquid.
If cubes of solid argon were placed in a cup of liquid argon, the solid argon would begin to melt due to the heat transfer from the warmer liquid argon. As the solid argon melts, it would turn into liquid argon, contributing to the overall volume of the liquid. Since both the solid and liquid argon are composed of the same substance, the process would not result in any significant chemical reactions or changes in the properties of argon. The temperature of the liquid may drop slightly as it absorbs heat to melt the solid, but it would remain within the liquid argon's boiling point range.
WATER! If you put water in a cup and leave it in the freezer it will turn to an ice cube then if you leave it somewhere warm and cosy it will turn back to a liquid again. Try it for yourself even.
liquid
If it's a paper cup, the cup can absorb the water, but the water won't go in. A solid's particles are packed tightly together and a liquid's particles are a bit more spread apart. A solid only vibrates in place, and because of gravity, a liquid cannot go up. Hope this helps.