This document discusses the three states of matter: solids, liquids, and gases. It defines solids as matter that does not change shape easily, liquids as matter that is wet and can change shape, and gases as matter that easily changes shape and often has no color or smell. Examples are given of each state of matter, and it notes that classifying objects into liquids, solids, or gases is a way to categorize different types of matter.
This document discusses the three states of matter: solids, liquids, and gases. It defines solids as matter that does not change shape easily, liquids as matter that is wet and can change shape, and gases as matter that easily changes shape and often has no color or smell. Examples are given of each state of matter, and it notes that classifying objects into liquids, solids, or gases is a way to categorize different types of matter.
This document discusses the three states of matter: solids, liquids, and gases. It defines solids as matter that does not change shape easily, liquids as matter that is wet and can change shape, and gases as matter that easily changes shape and often has no color or smell. Examples are given of each state of matter, and it notes that classifying objects into liquids, solids, or gases is a way to categorize different types of matter.