they move around in the air with smells of the particle
It Dissolves
they equalize and become the same temperature as the surrounding atmosphere and you get tea for the boston tea act reenactmen:0
As the tea cools, the oils, minerals, and other particles in the tea sometimes rise to the top.
Makes it sweeter in taste
He has a cup of tea.
There is no such English phrase as "tea of a cup." You either have a cup of tea, or you have tea in a cup.
A spoon in a cup of tea.If a spoon was left in a hot cup of tea conduction would happen. Particles in the part of the spoon that is in the hot cup of tea will use the heat/thermal energy of this as kinetic energy. These particles will then pass this kinetic energy (whilst still keeping some in themselves,) to the particles next to them. This will continue until all the particles in the spoon have kinetic energy.
Since it has particles large enough to cause sedimentation in the bottom of the glass, I'd say yes.
If a tea bag breaks, the contents of the tea bag, which are usually finely-broken tea leaves (called fannings or dust), go out into the cup. These fine particles can be gritty and unpleasant to drink. In some cases, they can also make the tea infuse faster, becoming too strong (too bitter or astringent). Depending on the size of the particles and the quality of the tea, the cup may still be pleasant to drink, or may not be. You can strain the contents out with a strainer, but some low-quality tea bags contain such fine dust that it is hard to strain them out. A coffee filter or tea infuser with a fine stainless steel mesh can achieve better results for the most finely-broken tea dust.
Making a cup of tea involves diffusion, which is the passive movement of particles from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration. Osmosis is the diffusion of water across a selectively permeable membrane, which is not directly involved in making tea. Active transport involves the movement of particles against a concentration gradient and requires energy, which is not typically needed for making tea.
No a cup of tea is a cup of tea u morons
'Cup' is a noun in the phrase "cup of tea." It is the object of the preposition 'of' and refers to the container holding the tea.