The answer to your question is,
2/3 vote by both houses
-Mabel <3
1. Tip: Do Not Procrastinate. Get your work done early and be efficient. People don’t think that freshman year doesn’t really matter or counts, but it does.
2. Tip: Get to know your teachers and counselors. Knowing a lot of adults in the school can give you more opportunities than you really believe. You’ll be known and well like by your fellow elders
3. Don’t be a stereotypical freshman. A lot of freshman try extra hard to act cool and that’s why upperclassman don’t really like them. Be you and don’t try to be someone you aren’t.
4.Do extracurriculars. You don’t have to do sports like many people do, but at least join a club. All of this will be great for your college application come senior year. If you don’t like the extracurriculars your school has then do activities outside of school. You could always add those to your application as well.
5. Have fun. Enjoy your freshman year as much as you can. Do the Snipity Snap, be on the gram, enjoy all of this while you can because it only gets harder from here on out.
Explanation:
here's the answer to your question
There are two kinds of changes: physical and chemical. Physical properties can change without changing the substance, while chemical properties do change the substance.
Physical properties, like you said mass or texture, can change without changing the substance because the properties don't change the fundamental state of the subject; it doesn't change anything like atoms or molecules.
For example, when you freeze water to make ice, it's a physical change. The water goes from a liquid state to a solid state. But, the substance isn't changed: the compound is still H2O whether it's water or ice.
Another example would be cutting a cake. You make a physical change by cutting a slice out of the cake: you make it smaller. However, afterwards, the cake is still a cake. You didn't turn it into a pie or a muffin; it stayed the same thing, a cake, while just getting smaller.