physical change
Squeezing oranges for juice is not a chemical change because it does not alter the chemical composition of the oranges. It is a physical change where the oranges are only being mechanically processed to extract the juice. The same chemical components of the oranges remain in the juice.
All organisms need water to grow, including oranges. So what you're squeezing out of oranges is mostly water.
It's a physical change why are some people f$#@%ing stupid and saying a chemical change??
Yes, squeezing an orange for juice is a physical change. This process involves the mechanical breaking down of the orange's cells to release the juice, but it does not alter the chemical composition of the orange itself. The juice remains orange juice, and the original properties of the fruit are still intact, making it a physical transformation rather than a chemical one.
The plural of orange is oranges.
The plural form of "orange" is "oranges."
Squeezing an orange and squeezing a water fruit mix together and you get a free cow.
It takes 3 or 4 oranges depending on the size of the oranges Depends on how you're squeezing them. I'm going to peel them and put them in a juicer, I bet that'll give way more juice.
yes, blood oranges have mostly red rather than orange flesh on the inside
Luster is a physical property.
Obviously not. Oranges are orange.