Flammability
A substance's ability to burn is called its flammability. It refers to how easily a material catches fire and sustains combustion. Factors that influence flammability include the presence of flammable gases, liquids, or solids in the substance.
When metals burn in air they form metal oxides.
oxygen
Anything that can burn is a combustible substance.
Burning in common language is the oxidation of a substance. Many materials may burn - carbon, sulphur, phosphorous, silicon, iron, and so on.
A substance which has ability to burn is called combustible.
A substance's ability to burn is called its flammability. It refers to how easily a material catches fire and sustains combustion. Factors that influence flammability include the presence of flammable gases, liquids, or solids in the substance.
Whether or not a substance can burn does not depend on it being organic. So long as it is a sufficiently reactive reducing agent, it can burn. It just so happens that most such substances on Earth are organic.
When metals burn in air they form metal oxides.
"to make angry" and "a substance to burn" is incense.
The main characteristics that determine whether a substance is flammable are its ability to ignite easily and burn rapidly when exposed to heat, oxygen, or a spark. Flammable substances typically have low flash points and release flammable vapors.
Water is a non-flammable substance and cannot burn.
when a substance is burned it turns into ash.
oxygen
oxygen
The ability of a substance to react in the presence of oxygen and burn when exposed to flame is known as flammability. It is a measure of how easily a material can ignite and sustain combustion in the presence of oxygen. Materials with high flammability are more likely to catch fire and burn rapidly.
Anything that can burn is a combustible substance.