Bread can be squashed fairly easily because the structure of bread is composed of spongy, flexible elements. But actually, with sufficient force all solids can be squashed. Some are harder to squash than others. The gravitational field of a black hole squashes all things that get too close to it. Solidity does not mean indestructibility, it just means that under normal circumstances, an object retains its shape.
gas is a state of matter that can be squashed.
it hardens but based on matter it is still a solid
Bread can be squashed because it contains air pockets and moisture, creating a soft and malleable texture. When pressure is applied, these air pockets collapse and the moisture redistributes, causing the bread to compress and change shape.
When a solid is squashed, its particles become closer together and the solid decreases in volume. The squashing force causes the particles to rearrange into a more compact arrangement, resulting in a change in shape of the solid.
No. Bread is already a solid.
A gas. It has no definite volume or shape.
A solid is a hard thing like wood. Wood is a solid because it can not be squashed but it has a set shape and a set volume. Mainly it can not be poured.
A solid grain of sand cannot be squashed because it is made up of tightly packed silica particles that have a fixed arrangement. The strong intermolecular forces between these particles prevent them from being easily compressed or deformed.
A bread bag A wrapper And if it is a solid bag, a bread bin.
Bread is solid, and not measured in milliliters.
Apple juice is a liquid, bread is a solid, a textbook is a solid, and steam is a gas
A cylinder would fit the description because a coin is like a squashed cylinder