flammability is how easily something can catch fire
No, inflamabillity is a chemical property, because burning (of anything) is a chemical change.
Reactivity with water, oxidation, flammability
True. Flammability is a chemical property of matter. It is not a physical property of matter. When wood burns, it changes to ashes, carbon dioxide, water vapor, and other gases. After burning, it is no longer wood.
Flammability and density are examples of chemical properties. Chemical properties describe how a substance interacts with other substances, such as its ability to burn (flammability) or its mass per unit volume (density).
When a match burns, the wood shows the property of flammability. This means that the wood is capable of catching fire and sustaining a reaction with an external heat source like the flame from the match.
Flammability is a physical chemical property of materials.Flammability is a chemical property.
Flammability
Wood from trees that have been hit by lightning can be dried out and become very hard, making it difficult to burn efficiently. Additionally, the intense heat from the lightning strike can cause the wood to become charred, which can reduce its flammability.
Chemical: flammability requires a chemical reaction to occur in the presence of oxygen at a sufficiently high temperature.
Burning is a chemical change, flammability is a chemical property.
Flammability involve a chemical reaction - oxidation.
Thermability