Quote:
Originally posted by 7/27
Yeah but we're 70% water so if 70% of us has vaporised then that's more than half so yes we have vaporised. If you have some salt water and you heat it so all the water boils and only the salt remains, then you'd say that it's boiled even though there's still salt left.
And this doesn't seem to be a cooking thread, so I guess the word was used out of context. Ain'tmyfault.mp3
I never said they did
That's like saying river water can't vaporise because it contains soil. It doesn't need to be 100% fully turned into gas to say that it's boiled .
|
not you comparing human body to salt water
I literally can't
you say THE WATER BOILS BECAUSE THE WATER (H2O) BOILS.
HUMAN BODY DOESN'T BOIL, WE DON'T VAPORIZE. You can say
WATER IN THE BODY VAPORIZES,
NOT THE BODY VAPORIZES
also the word is used correctly, because it's everyday use
you try to use scientific context to say the word 'boil' is used incorrectly but you contradict yourself by saying in the most unscientific way that
his body boils and turns into gases
PLEASE, I'm a science major here, I know when and how to use words. just stop sis, you're just embarrassing yourself here