A milkshake would qualify as a solid. A fish swims in a liquid (water). If a fish was stuck in a milkshake it wouldn't be able to swim because it's a solid. Therefore a milkshake qualifies as a solid.
A milkshake is a liquid.
No, a milkshake does not have tightly packed particles. Instead, it is a mixture of liquid and solid components (like ice cream and milk) that are blended together, resulting in a semi-liquid consistency. The particles in a milkshake are more loosely arranged compared to solid substances, allowing it to flow and take the shape of its container.
Well, yes and no. Ice cream is kind of both a solid and liquid, ice cubes (REALLY well ground up) are solids, cream is liquid. So, both depending on who you're asking.
Well, buttercup, milk is technically a liquid. It may look creamy and dreamy, but it flows like a liquid and takes the shape of its container. So, next time you're pondering the state of milk, just remember it's a liquid that's udderly delicious.
liquid
solid liquid
Liquid.
Solid
it is a gas
The general classes of colloids are sols (solid particles dispersed in a liquid), gels (cross-linked networks of solid particles dispersed in a liquid), and emulsions (liquid droplets dispersed in another liquid).
change of a liquid to a solid
A gas is not a liquid or a solid.