Asked by Drip

Why can liquids be poured?


Their particles are fixed in place


Liquids have no bonds between particles


Their particles move freely and are far apart


Their particles can slide past each other because bonds are weaker than in solids

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
"Their particles can slide past each other because bonds are weaker than in solids."

In liquids the particles are close together but not fixed; intermolecular forces hold them near each other but are weak enough to allow particles to move/slide past one another, letting the liquid flow and be poured.