Chemistry
Match the examples of changes in List I with the correct type of change in List II.
| List I | List II |
|---|---|
| 1. Burning of paper | A: Physical change |
| 2. Ringing of an electric bell | B: Chemical change |
| 3. Curdling of milk | |
| 4. An electric light is switched on. | |
| 5. Melting of butter |
Phy & Chem Changes
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Answer
| List I | List II |
|---|---|
| 1. Burning of paper | B: Chemical change |
| 2. Ringing of an electric bell | A: Physical change |
| 3. Curdling of milk | B: Chemical change |
| 4. An electric light is switched on | A: Physical change |
| 5. Melting of butter | A: Physical change |
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Related Questions
Select the correct answer from the choice in bracket to complete each sentence:
A change in which a substance retains its identity is a …………… [physical/chemical] change.
Matter is added or removed during a …………… [chemical/physical] change.
Energy required for completion of a physical change is …………… [released/absorbed] when the change is reversed.
Dissolution of lead nitrate in water is deemed as a …………… [physical/chemical] change.
A change in which matter undergoes a change but the total mass of substance is unaltered is a …………… [physical/chemical] change.
State which of the following 1 to 5 pertain to —
A: Physical Change
B: Chemical change
Sublimation.
Fermentation.
Liquefaction or condensation.
Magnetization.
Respiration.
Give reasons why the following are considered as chemical changes.
Copper carbonate on heat gives copper oxide and carbon dioxide.
A bright light is seen evolved when a strip of magnesium is heated.
Sulphur when burnt in air evolves a gaseous acidic product.
An iron nail kept open in the atmosphere rusts.
A piece of magnesium strip is dropped into a beaker containing dilute hydrochloric acid.
Name the following:
The salt obtained when a chemical change takes place on addition of iron to dilute sulphuric acid.
The product obtained during a physical change when water converts from a liquid into a solid.
The product of the chemical change on keeping a polished iron nail exposed to the atmosphere.
A form of energy required for a chemical change.
The gaseous product of the chemical change which takes place during respiration in living organisms.