When you get it, it's liquid; it won't burn until it's been converted to a gas.
Gasoline will freeze by the time it gets to -50C. Then it would be a solid. But most of us don't go out in that weather.
Gasoline is liquid at standard temperature and pressure.
Gasoline is a liquid. It is a liquid because the gasoline u pour
Solid in solid: metal alloys. Liquid in liquid: vinegar dissolving in water. Gas in gas: air. Solid in liquid: salt dissolving in water. Liquid in solid: mercury absorbed by gold. Gas in liquid: carbon dioxide dissolving in soda. Solid in gas: smoke particles in air. Liquid in gas: water vapor in air. Gas in solid: hydrogen absorbed by palladium.
a feather is a solid
* solid to liquid: melting* liquid to solid: freezing* liquid to gas: vaporization* gas to liquid: liquefaction* solid to gas: sublimation* gas to solid: deposition
Gasoline is a liquid.
Gasoline is a liquid.
Gasoline is liquid at standard temperature and pressure.
Gasoline is liquid at standard temperature and pressure.
Solid - A rock, icecube, clay, or wood Liquid - Water Gas - Fossil Fuels, Gasoline
Gasoline can be a liquid and a gas, I am not sure about a solid though.
Gasoline is a liquid. It is a liquid because the gasoline u pour
Air (gas) Steel (solid) Gasoline (liquid)
At room temperature and up to around 100o F, Vaseline is a semi-solid, or quasi-solid, which has characteristics of both a solid and a liquid. It melts at around 100o F, and behaves only as a liquid.
Gasoline is not a solid it is a gas.
Solid
Which gas? There are lots of them. Gas is a stage of matter (solid, liquid, gas) not what you seem to think it is. So your answer is - who knows.