Opaque means something is not clear or translucent and cannot be looked through.
Yes, tin foil is opaque, meaning it does not allow light to pass through it. This property makes it useful for blocking light, heat, or moisture in various applications, such as cooking or food storage.
Cooking pots are usually opaque.*****Bit more info:A metal cooking pot would be opaque - can not be seen through. A glassware cooking pot would be transparent, or translucent if the glass has been frosted deliberately. For instance, Borosilicate glass is a type of glassware designed for use in an oven or on the stove.
Mercury is opaque, meaning it does not allow light to pass through it.
Yes, tin is opaque, meaning it does not allow light to pass through it.
Opaque is between clear and solid. A couldy jellow is opaque you cannot see through it, but you can kinda look into it. If you made clear jello then added some skim milk into it so it is couldy it would be opaque. This is used in cooking when cooking fish or vegetables like onions.
Opaque?
Yes, tissue paper is typically opaque, meaning it does not allow light to pass through it easily.
No, it is not. It is an adjective meaning dark or obscured, as if by opaque ink.
(Opaque is an adjective meaning unable to be seen through, blocking light, non-transparent.)"Adding tinting film to car windows makes them nearly opaque from the outside.""When comparing liquids, milk is translucent while oil is opaque.""The decisions of the Chinese government are made behind an opaque curtain of bureaucracy."
Yes, a brick is opaque, meaning it does not allow light to pass through it. This is due to its dense and solid structure which blocks the transmission of light.
Cooking terms are words and phrases that are used in the activity of cooking.
Cooking words and their meanings