Plastic is not inherently attracted to anything. It is generally an inert material that does not have magnetic or static properties to attract other substances.
An object made of iron, nickel, or cobalt will be strongly attracted to a magnet due to their magnetic properties. Other materials like wood, plastic, or glass will not be strongly attracted to a magnet.
put it in the water and it can be attracted to anything
Well, darling, a magnet can only stick to materials that are attracted to it, like iron or steel. So, if you're trying to get cozy with some wood or plastic, you're out of luck. Stick to what sticks back, honey.
When a plastic comb is charged by rubbing it against a cloth or hair, it becomes negatively charged. The rice grain acquires a positive charge when it comes into contact with the negatively charged comb. Opposite charges attract each other, causing the rice grain to be attracted to the plastic comb.
The movement of paper bits towards the rubbed plastic strip indicates the presence of static electricity. When the plastic is rubbed, electrons transfer from the plastic to the paper, causing the paper bits to be attracted to the strip due to opposite charges.
Because plastic can't be attracted to a magnet. Only metal can be.
An object made of iron, nickel, or cobalt will be strongly attracted to a magnet due to their magnetic properties. Other materials like wood, plastic, or glass will not be strongly attracted to a magnet.
no it is not a metal
put it in the water and it can be attracted to anything
Well, darling, a magnet can only stick to materials that are attracted to it, like iron or steel. So, if you're trying to get cozy with some wood or plastic, you're out of luck. Stick to what sticks back, honey.
English men are attracted to anything with a heartbeat.
beer is sweet and hornets are attracted to anything sweet
Anything that is attracted to a permanent magnet will be attracted to (sticks to) a temporary magnet.
Water can be attracted to certain surfaces or materials through a phenomenon known as adhesion. Adhesion occurs when water molecules are attracted to and stick to a different material, such as glass or cloth, due to intermolecular forces. This attraction is what allows water to wet surfaces and spread out.
anything that has iron, colbalt, steel, or nickel in it
"Attracted" is a loaded term, in this context; in that light, no, you may be attracted, strictly speaking, to just about anything--hopefully edifying.
A plastic straw can stick to a magnet because it is made of a type of plastic that is attracted to magnets. However, plastic is an insulator and does not conduct electricity.