Glass is flexible to some degree but can easily break upon impact.
Muscovite has a perfect basal cleavage, meaning it breaks easily along one plane into thin sheets. This results in a flexible and elastic nature to the mineral, often yielding thin, transparent sheets.
Mica breaks into sheets because of its layered crystal structure, which is characterized by weak van der Waals bonds between the layers. This directional cleavage allows the mineral to split easily along these planes. The perfect cleavage is typically in one direction, resulting in thin, flexible sheets.
A fuse is a safety switching device made of a fine wire that easily breaks when an excess current flows through it. When the wire breaks, it interrupts the circuit, protecting the electrical system from damage caused by overloads or short circuits.
The rock that breaks easily in hand is typically chalk, a soft sedimentary rock composed primarily of calcium carbonate. Due to its low hardness on the Mohs scale (about 1 to 2), it can be easily crumbled or broken with minimal pressure. Other examples include talc and some types of shale, but chalk is the most commonly recognized for its fragility.
Toffee is sweet and solid but can be chewy and pliable, so it does not break easily.
Glass is transperent, water proof, it breaks easily, it allows light to pass through it and it's not flexible.(Examples: Cup, Window panes and spectacle lens)
Cotton is a very flexible material. If it was not flexible, then one would not make cloths out of it. Each cottonfibre can easily be bendt sideways. It does however not stretch much before it breaks. Regards.
flexible, easily bent
FLEXIBLE Easily Bent: Flexible, Supple, Bendable For Science Vocab: Ductile
No, "flexible" is an adjective that describes the ability to bend or adapt easily.
Muscovite has a perfect basal cleavage, meaning it breaks easily along one plane into thin sheets. This results in a flexible and elastic nature to the mineral, often yielding thin, transparent sheets.
A material that breaks easily is glass. Glass is brittle and can shatter into sharp pieces when subjected to stress or impact.
No, silicon in its crystalline form is not flexible. It is a brittle material that breaks easily under bending stress. However, silicon can be made into flexible forms, such as in the form of thin films or membranes, through processes like doping or creating amorphous silicon.
Glass is a material that breaks easily under impact or pressure due to its brittle nature. Similarly, thin ceramic objects can also break easily if dropped or mishandled.
Muscovite mica's dominant type of breakage is perfect basal cleavage, which means it breaks easily along flat planes parallel to its basal structure. This results in thin, flexible sheets of mica being formed when it breaks.
well..... throw it at a wall. if it breaks, it breaks easily. simple.
The noun forms of the adjective 'flexible' are flexibleness and flexibility.