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Mussels

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Asked over 10 years ago by userpic low4i
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5313 0 459045788 profile 75982 0
which kind? Mussels as in food or muscles on a person?!
over 10 years ago
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4619 22 profile 81011
Glass is an amorphous (non-crystalline) solid material that exhibits a glass transition, which is the reversible transition in amorphous materials (or in amorphous regions within semicrystalline materials) from a hard and relatively brittle state into a molten or rubber-like state. Glasses are typically brittle and can be optically transparent. The most familiar type of glass is soda-lime glass, which is composed of about 75% Silicon dioxide (SiO2), sodium oxide (Na2O) from soda ash, lime (CaO), and several minor additives. The term glass is often used to refer only to this specific use. Silicate glass generally has the property of being transparent. Because of this, it has a great many applications. One of its primary uses is as a building material, as small panes set into window openings in walls, but in the 20th-century often as the major cladding material of many large buildings. Because glass can be formed or moulded into any shape, and also because it is a sterile product, it has been traditionally used for vessels: bowls, vases, bottles, jars and glasses. In its most solid forms it has also been used for paperweights, marbles, and beads. Glass is both reflective and refractive of light, and these qualities can be enhanced by cutting and polishing in order to make optical lenses, prisms and fine glassware. Glass can be coloured by the addition of metallic salts, and can also be painted. These qualities have led to the extensive use of glass in the manufacturing of art objects and in particular, stained glass windows. Although brittle, glass is extremely durable, and many examples of glass fragments exist from early glass-making cultures. In science, however, the term glass is defined in a broader sense, encompassing every solid that possesses a non-crystalline (i.e. amorphous) structure and exhibits a glass transition when heated towards the liquid state. These sorts of glasses can be made of quite different kinds of materials: metallic alloys, ionic melts, aqueous solutions, molecular liquids, and polymers. For many applications (bottles, eyewear) polymer glasses (acrylic glass, polycarbonate, polyethylene terephthalate) are a lighter alternative to traditional silica glasses.
over 10 years ago
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5352 18 462478037 profile 268347 0
@Olivia_ZaynMalik💙 ikr lol
over 10 years ago
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4715 17 profile 444520
Mussels asin the food lol
over 10 years ago
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5352 18 462478037 profile 268347 0
@low4i oh right... Lol
over 10 years ago
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4877 17 421436784 profile 235085 0
what kind of mussles
over 10 years ago
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4619 22 profile 81011
its the food because the other type is spelt muscles
over 10 years ago
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4921 16 425234794 profile 53851 0
Well the way that mussel is spelt is a shellfish... If you mean a human muscle then check your spelling
over 10 years ago
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4715 17 profile 444520
I mean the shellfish
over 10 years ago
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4840 21 418254319 profile 607546 0
surreee
about 10 years ago
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