First you would fill it up, then you would either drink it up or drink it down.
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Do you mean the actual glass itself is warm or the water inside? If the water is warm then its a glass of warm water What is the noun you want to modify -- the glass or the water? It's hard to imagine a warm glass containing cold water, but I suppose it's possible.
Yes, "He poured water into the glass." is a grammatically correct sentence as long as the first word is capitalized and there is a period at the end.
Think of it simply as orange squash. When you put loads of squash in the glass, then put only a little water in it, it tastes very strong and sweet, doesn't it? Then when you put a smidgen of squash in the glass, and loads of water, it tastes very weak and watery? Well, basically, the first one is a CONCENTRATED SOLUTION. This means that there is a very high proportion of something (lets call it squash) to water. This is why your wee turns yellow if you're dehydrated, because the proportion of flushed out toxins is large in relation to the water in the solution. And if there is a relatively low proportion of something in relation to the water, then it is a DILUTED SOLUTION. Hope this helps :)
To annul an action. Example: DO = Fill a glass with water. UNDO = Empty the glass of water. In which the second action nullifies the first. or it means to UNDO A PROBLEM OR WORD
No, the noun water is a common, uncountable noun, a word for a substance.A collective noun is a word used to group people or things taken together as one whole in a descriptive way; for example:a glass of water (the noun 'glass' is the collective noun)a bucket of water (the noun 'bucket' is the collective noun)a barrel of water (the noun 'barrel' is the collective noun)
You fill the glass up.
You fill the glass up.
.....
you fill it up
When that happens it uses up all the oxygen and replaces it with co2 (carbon dioxide) and water and that what makes the sucking affect :)
when you put ice in the water pushes out because the ice is taking up space
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To put it in simple terms, your hand is taking up the water's space. Your hand has a mass and so does the water inside the glass. If you put your hand inside the glass, the property of displacement occurs where the mass of water being displaced is the mass of your hand going inside the glass. This occurs because you are applying a force which will occupy space inside the glass forcing the water out. As well, the human body is more dense than freshwater which forces water out.
Put salty water into a pot, hold a mirror/glass over it, boil the water, and the water will steam up and drill down the glass, and the salt with still be in the pot xx
you can put a drop of water on a plane of glass and then watch it evaporate or you can but a breaker of water over a busen burn or open flame and watch the water level drop and then whilst this happening, put a plane of glass above it and water will condense (become a liquid) on the glass
Water expands when it becomes ice.So the glass will break if you put a glass of water inside the refrigerator. I put glasses of water inside my refrigerator all the time.It keeps it cold. If your glass is freezing and breaking you need to check your temp setting.