first of all, there is two types of sponges. one of them are when you take them and clean the dishes or toilet, tub. The other 1 is where it lives under water. And you can learn that in class when, you are doing science. "Grade 6 Diversity Of life". the other 1 you can learn in grade 1, 2 or kindergarden, preschool.
Yes, there are such things as sponges. They make very good cleaning supplies for places like kitchens and bathrooms. They also provide a little variety of ways you can clean places. Sponges generally always have a rough side and a softer side for cleaning easily.
I think you are talking about sea sponges, like in SpongeBob? Yes, they are real, and they are living things, but they just pretty much just sit there...I don't know much about them.
A sponge is a yellow scrub
definition/description of a sponge:
yellow,soft/rough,malambot,
description:
it takes away stains from dishes floors,tiles and other glass things...
Sponges are natural filters. They grow near and around coral reefs and help clean the ocean of plankton and algae. For hundreds of years, they have been prized for their natural absorbency and are harvested even today to be used as high-end bathing tools. Modern synthetic sponges mimic the structure of natural sponges simply because that structure makes them effective cleaning tools.
Flour, eggs, butter, sugar and probably baking powder.
The function of a sponge is to absorb water and rinse yourself with it.
Pores
A sponge doesn't have a body temperature, because a sponge doesn't have a body. But how warm or cold you put the sponge under water or any liquid is the temperature of the sponge.
Sponge
The sponge uses the choanocytes to move a steady current through its body.
Spongocoel, literally 'sponge cavity'.
A sponge.
Ostia
The body of a sponge is covered in tiny openings called pores. These pores allow water to flow in and out of the sponge, which helps the sponge filter out food particles and oxygen from the surrounding water.
One.
Through the holes in their body.
elastic fibers
A golf course
The sponge is considered to be asymmetrical because it is not a perfect shape, and it is generally an off shape.