Heat was use to cook food, maintain your temperature, and sometimes used as a light source.
The past participle is heated.
The past participle is heated.
The past tense and past participle are both heated.
which instruments used for the measurement of heat
In the past, thermal energy was used for heating homes and buildings, cooking food, and for industrial processes such as metalworking and pottery making. Simple methods such as burning wood, coal, or oil were used to harness thermal energy for these purposes.
light, heat
Insulators
Yes, it is. It is the adverb form of heated, which is the past and past participle of the verb 'to heat' used as an adjective.
The past participle is heated.
The past participle is heated.
The past tense and past participle are both heated.
heating your house cooking making pots providing heat in caveman times
Heat is a regular verb so the past and past participle are formed by adding -ed. It is the same for preheat. preheat / preheated / preheated
we have used in the past for coughs a mixture of whiskey, peppermint and lemon juice. Heat on meduim heat until peppermint is dissloved. Take 1 teasponn as needed.
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No, the word 'fueled' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to fuel. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.The word 'fuel' is also a noun, a word for a material used to produce heat or power by burning; a word for a thing.
there is nothing intrinsically wrong with a stove that doesn't heat like it used to. It is in the wood that you are using. Maybe this load of wood is not as seasoned as the loads you used before. Any moisture left in unseasoned wood will reduce the heat of the fire and make the stove seem like it is not heating. Or maybe this load of wood is a different kind of wood than in the past. If you used Oak, Ash and Black Locust in the past, and are using Maple now, or Elm or Sycamore, it will not burn as hot. These woods burn faster but with less heat.