When it snows the ice only freezes the top leaving the bottom still water and when you crack that ice the water is still there and the fishes in the sea are still alive. :)
i hoped you have learnt
In ponds, the water stays more still but in seas the water moves and does not freeze easily.
take out the battery but you shouldn't need to you have to turn your phone off often (at night of course!!) so it gets a rest and doesnt freeze or turn off at all!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Not all above ground pools have to be disassembled during winter, although it is a good idea to drain them. Water expands when it freezes, and if the water is trapped in a closed container or in a crack, the expansion can break the container or the material surrounding it. Pipes often break, when water inside them freezes.
My IE often get freeze recently, my friends recommend me a software, named tuneup360, he said it is very useful, which can fix all the problem happen in the computer/
Yes, it will kill the leaves but the roots will survive over the winter (in the UK).
60% water and 40% anti-freeze works better than, 50/50, unless it freezes often where you live.
Plain water because the salt in the other water lowers the freezing point. All molecules must line up in order to freeze, therefore if adding salt, the Na and CL must line up with the water molecules in order to freeze. With plain water, the molecules line up faster and thus freeze faster.
Seven swans-a-swimming
Well, either your temperatures are inconsistent, often melting things and refreezing them; the other possibility is that if you have a fridge with a conjoined water dispenser, then that is leaking and pooling at the bottom to freeze.
"Often" and "frequently" are antonyms of "rarely".
Depends where you are. On the mountain tops there are permanent glaciers. In the valleys it often tops 30°C in summer, but rarely goes below -10°C in winter.
Rarely or barely happens :) if this is your homework good luck with the other synonoms :) :)
For the same reason that water turning to ice is often known as the freeze. It is simply a name use to describe the seasonal process of winter ice melting back into water.