Busy. Please wait.
Log in with Clever
or

show password
Forgot Password?

Don't have an account?  Sign up 
Sign up using Clever
or

Username is available taken
show password


Make sure to remember your password. If you forget it there is no way for StudyStack to send you a reset link. You would need to create a new account.
Your email address is only used to allow you to reset your password. See our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service.


Already a StudyStack user? Log In

Reset Password
Enter the associated with your account, and we'll email you a link to reset your password.

Science terms and definitions

Quiz yourself by thinking what should be in each of the black spaces below before clicking on it to display the answer.
        Help!  

Term
Definition
Mass   The quantity of matter in an object. More specifically, it is a measure of the inertia or sluggishness that an object exhibits in response to any effort made to start it, stop it, deflect it, or change its state of motion in any way.  
🗑
Law of universal gravitation   Law which states:every body in the universe attracts every other body with a mutually attracting force. For two bodies this force is directly proportional to the product of their masses&inversely proportional to the square of the distance separating them  
🗑
Velocity   The speed of an object with specification of its direction of motion.  
🗑
Quantum hypothesis   The idea that light energy is contained in discrete packets called quanta.  
🗑
Entropy   The measure of energy dispersal of a system. Whenever energy freely transforms from one form to another, the direction of transformation is toward a state of greater disorder.  
🗑
Law of reflection   The angle of reflection equals the angle of incidence.  
🗑
Force vector   An arrow drawn to scale so that its length represents the magnitude of a force and its direction represents the direction of the force.  
🗑
Air Resistance   The force of friction acting on an object due to its motion through air.  
🗑
Polyatomic ion   Molecules that carry a net electric change.  
🗑
Kinetic energy   Energy of motion, described by the relationship K=mv2  
🗑
Conservation of momentum   Principle which states: in the absence of external force, the momentum of a system remains unchanged. Hence, the momentum before an event involving only internal forces is equal to the momentum after the event: mv(before event)=mv(after event)  
🗑
Dipole   A separation of charge that occurs in a chemical bond because of differences in the electronegativities of the bonded atoms.  
🗑
Magnetic domains   Clustered regions of aligned magnetic atoms. When these regions themselves are aligned with one another, the substance containing them is magnet.  
🗑
Fact   A phenomenon about which competent observers can agree.  
🗑
Half reaction   One portion of an oxidation-reduction reaction, represented by an equation showing electrons as either reactants or products.  
🗑
Covalent bond   A chemical bond in which atoms are held together by their mutual attraction for two electrons they share.  
🗑
Half life   The time required for half the atoms in a sample of radioactive isotope to decay  
🗑
Scientific method   An orderly method for gaining, organizing, and applying new knowledge.  
🗑
Atomic spectrum   The pattern of frequencies of electromagnetic radiation emitted by the atoms of an element, considered to be the elements fingerprints.  
🗑
Thermonuclear fusion   Nuclear fusion produced by high temperature (weak force)  
🗑
Probability cloud   The pattern of electron position plotted over time to show the likelihood of an electrons being at a given position at a given times.  
🗑
Insulator   Any material without free charged particles and through which current does not easily flow.  
🗑
Atom   The smallest particle of an element that has all of the elements chemical properties.  
🗑
Coulomb   The SI unit of electrical charge, equal in magnitude to the total charge of 6.25 x 1018 electrons.  
🗑
Period   The time required for a vibration or a wave to make a complete cycle.  
🗑
Physical property   Any physical attribute of a substance, such as color, density or hardness.  
🗑
Conduction   The transfer of thermal energy by molecular and electronic collisions within a substance (especially a solid)  
🗑
Ionic bond   A chemical bond in which an attractive electric force holds ions of opposite charge together.  
🗑
Acidic solution   A solution in which the hydronium ion concentration is higher than the hydroxide ion concentration.  
🗑
Friction   The resistive force that opposes the motion or attempted motion of an object through a fluid or past another object with which it is in contact.  
🗑
Electrostatics   The study of electric charge at rest( not in motion, as in electric currents).  
🗑
Heat   The thermal energy that flows from a substance of higher temperature to lower temperature, commonly measured in calories or joules.  
🗑
pH   A measure of the acidity of a solution, equal to the negative of the base-10 logarithm of the hydronium ion concentration.  
🗑
Inverse-square law   Law relating the intensity of an effect to the inverse square of the distance from the cause: Intensity~1/distance2.  
🗑
Conservation of energy and machines   Principle which states: the work output of any machine cannot exceed the work input. In an ideal machine, where no energy is transformed into heat, Work input=work output and (Fd) input=(Fd)output.  
🗑
Neutral solution   A solution in which the hydronium ion concentration is equal to the hydroxide ion concentration.  
🗑
Period   A horizontal row in the periodic table.  
🗑
elemental formula   A notation that uses the atomic symbol and(sometimes) a numerical subscript to denote how atoms are bonded in an element,  
🗑
Critical mass   The minimum mass of fissionable material in a reactor or nuclear bomb that will sustain a chain reaction.  
🗑
Force pair   The action-and-reaction set of pushes and pulls that constitute an interaction.  
🗑
Physical change   A change in which a substance changes its physical properties without changing its chemical identity.  
🗑
Satellite   A projectile or small body that orbits a larger body.  
🗑
Chemistry   The study of matter and the transformations it can undergo.  
🗑
Hypothesis   An educated guess or a reasonable explanation.  
🗑
Oxidation-reduction reaction   A reaction involving the transfer of electrons from one reactant to another.  
🗑
Electric power   The rate of energy transfer, or rate of doing work; the amount of energy per unit time, which can be measured by the product of current and voltage. It is measured in watts(or kilowatts)  
🗑
Science   The collective finding of humans about nature, and a process of gathering and organizing knowledge about nature.  
🗑
Tangential velocity   Velocity that is parallel (tangent) to a curved path.  
🗑
Nuclear fission   The splitting of the nucleus of a heavy atom, such as uranium-235, into two main parts, accompanied by the release of much energy.  
🗑
Conservation of energy   Principle which states: in the absence of external work input or output, the energy of a system remains unchanged. Energy cannot be created or destroyed.  
🗑
Chemical formula   A notation used to indicate the composition of a compound, consisting of the atomic symbols for the different elements fo the compound and numerical subscripts indicating the ratio in which the atoms combine.  
🗑
Ion   An electrically charged particle created when an atom either loses or gains one or more electrons.  
🗑
Condensation   A transformation from a gas to a liquid  
🗑
Shell   A set of overlapping atomic orbitals of similar energy levels; in other words, a region of space in which electrons of similar energy levels in an atom have a 90 percent chance of being located.  
🗑
Control   A test that excludes the variable being investigated in a scientific experiment.  
🗑
Relationship of impulse and momentum   Impulse is equal to the change in the momentum of the object upon which the impulse acts. In symbolic notation, Ft= ?mv.  
🗑
Spectroscope   A device that uses a prism or a diffraction grating to separate light into its component colors.  
🗑
Reduction   The process whereby a reactant gains one or more electrons.  
🗑
Inertia   The property of things to resist changes in motion.  
🗑
Forced vibration   The setting up of vibrations in an object by a vibrating source.  
🗑
Reflection   The returning of a wave to the medium from which it came when it hits a barrier.  
🗑
Direct current(DC)   An electric current flowing in one direction only.  
🗑
Electronegativity   The ability of an atom to attract a bonding pair of electrons to itself when bonded to another atom.  
🗑
Atomic nucleus   The core of an atom, consisting of two basic subatomic particles, protons and neutrons.  
🗑
Thermal (internal) energy   The total energy (kinetic plus potential) of the submicroscopic particles that make up a substance.  
🗑
Impulse   The product of the force acting on an object and the time during which it acts.  
🗑
Radiation   The transfer of energy by means of electromagnetic waves.  
🗑
Maxwells counterpart to faradays law   magnetic field induced in any region space which electric field change w/time The magnitude of electric field proportional to rate which electric field changes. direction of induced magnetic field at right angles to changing electric field.  
🗑
Magnetic field   The region of magnetic influence around a magnetic pole or a moving charged particle.  
🗑
Conductor   Any material having free charged particles that easily flow through it when an electric force acts on them.  
🗑
Momentum   The product of the mass of an object and it velocity.  
🗑
Transverse wave   A wave in which the medium vibrates in a direction perpendicular(transverse) to the direction in which the wave travels  
🗑
Electrically polarized   Term applied to an atom or molecule in which the changes are aligned so that one side has a slight excess of negative charge.  
🗑
Force   Simply stated, a push or pull.  
🗑
Electromagnetic wave   A wave of energy produced when an electric charge accelerates.  
🗑
Electric Field   Defined as force per unit charge can b considered to b energetic aura surrounding charged objects.charged point the field decreases w/ distance according to the inversesquare law like a gravitational field oppositely charged parallel plates uniform  
🗑
Kilogram   the unit of mass equals the mass of 1 liter(L) of water at 4C  
🗑
Electron   A negatively charged particle in an atom  
🗑
Acid   A substance that donates hydrogen ions  
🗑
Alternating current (AC)   Electric current that repeatedly reverses its direction; the electric charges vibrate about relatively fixed positions. In the United States, the vibrational rate is 60 Hz.  
🗑
Principal quantum number (N)   An integer that specifies the quantized energy level of an atomic orbital.  
🗑
Beta particle   An electron (or positron) emitted during the radioactive decay of certain nuclei.  
🗑
Technology   The means of solving practical problems by applying the findings of science.  
🗑
Atomic symbol   An abbreviation for an element or atom.  
🗑
Diffraction   Any bending of light by means other than reflection and refraction.  
🗑
Valence electron   An electron that is located in the outermost occupied shell in an atom and can participate in chemical bonding.  
🗑
Liquid   Matter that has a definite volume but no definite shape, assuming the shape of its container  
🗑
Valence electron   An electron that is located in the outermost occupied shell of an atom and can participate in chemical bonding.  
🗑
Mole   6.02 x 1023 units of anything.  
🗑
Neutron   An electrically neutral subatomic particle in an atomic nucleus.  
🗑
Atomic orbital   A position in an atom in which an electron has a 90 percent chance of being located.  
🗑
Pseudoscience   A theory or practice that is considered to be without scientific foundation but purports to use the methods of science.  
🗑
Nucleon   A nuclear particle; A proton or a neutron in an atomic nucleus.  
🗑
Radioactivity   The process whereby unstable atomic nuclei break down and emit radiation  
🗑
Base   a substance that accepts hydrogen ions.  
🗑
Electromagnetic spectrum   A continuous range of electromagnetic waves extending from radio waves to gamma rays.  
🗑
Ellipse   The sum of the distances from any point on the path to two pints called foci is a constant; also the oval path followed by a satellite.  
🗑
Compound   a material in which atoms of different elements are bonded to one another  
🗑
Energy   The property of a system that enables it to do work  
🗑
Resonance   A dramatic increase in the amplitude of a wave that results when the frequency of forced vibrations matches an objects natural frequency.  
🗑
Hydrogen bond   A strong dipoledipole attraction between slightly positive hydrogen atom on one molecule and a pair of nonbonding electrons on another molecule.  
🗑
Evaporation   A transformation from liquid to gas  
🗑
Solute   Any component in a solution that is not the solvent.  
🗑
Wavelength   The distance from the top of one crest to the top of the next one, or, equivalently, the distance between successive identical parts of the wave.  
🗑
Electric potential energy   The energy a charge possesses by virtue of its location in a magnetic field.  
🗑
Longitudinal wave   A wave in which the medium vibrates in a direction parallel with the direction in which the wave travels.  
🗑
Atomic number   The number that designates the identity of an element, which is the number of protons in the nucleus of an atom; in a neutral atom the atomic number is also the number electrons in the atom.  
🗑
Gas   Matter that has neither a definite volume nor definite shape, always filling any space available to it.  
🗑
Wave   A disturbance that travels from one place to another, transporting energy, but not necessarily matter, along with it.  
🗑
Law of mass conservation   Law which states; matter is neither created nor destroyed during a chemical reaction.  
🗑
Newtons second law of motion   Law which states; the acceleration produced by a net force on an object is directly proportional to the net force, is in the same direction as the net force, and is inversely proportional to the mass of the object.  
🗑
Protons   A positively charged particle in an atomic nucleus  
🗑
Gamma Ray   High-frequency electromagnetic radiation emitted by the nuclei of radioactive atoms  
🗑
Transparent   The term applied to materials through which light can travel in straight lines  
🗑
Efficiency   The percentage of the work put into a machine that is converted into useful work output (energy output divided by total energy input)  
🗑
Hydroxide ion   A water molecule after losing a hydrogen ion.  
🗑
Periodic trend   The gradual change of any property in the elements across a period  
🗑
Terminal speed   The speed at which the acceleration of a falling object stops when air resistance balances weight  
🗑
Entropy   The term used to describe the idea that energy has a natural tendency to disperse Equals the total amount of energy in a given amount of substance divided by the substances absolute temperature.  
🗑
Frequency   The number of to-and-fro vibrations an oscillator makes in a given time; or the number of times a particular point on a wave (for example the crust) passes a point in a given time  
🗑
Photon   A particle of light  
🗑
Catalyst   A substance that increases the rate of a chemical reaction by lowering its activation energy  
🗑
Convection   the transfer of thermal energy in a gas or liquid by means of currents in the heated fluid The fluid flows carrying energy with it  
🗑
Applied research   Research dedicated to the development of widely used products and processes  
🗑
Boiling   Evaporation in which bubbles form beneath the liquid surface  
🗑
Newtons third law of motion   Law which states; whenever one object exerts a force on a second object the second object exerts an equal and opposite force on the first object  
🗑
Vector components   Parts into which a vector can be separated and that act in different directions from the vector  
🗑
Oxidation   The process whereby a reactant loses one or more electrons  
🗑
Speed   The distance traveled per time  
🗑
Coulombs Law   The relationship among force, charge and distance: F=kq1q2/d2 if the charges are alike in sign the force is repelling if the charges are unlike the force is attractive  
🗑
Valence shell   The outermost occupied shell of an atom  
🗑
Electric Current   The flow of electric charge that transports energy from one place to another it is measured in amperes where 1 A is the flow of 6.25 x 1018 electrons per second or 1 coulomb per second  
🗑
Refraction   The bending waves due to a change in the medium  
🗑
Melting   A transformation from solid to liquid  
🗑
Opaque   The term applied to materials that absorb light without remission  
🗑
Net force   The Combination of all forces that act on an object  
🗑
Metallic Bond   A chemical bond in which the metal ions in a piece of solid metal are held together by their attraction to a fluid of electrons in the metal  
🗑
Semiconductor   A material that can be made to sometimes behave as an insulator and sometimes a conductor  
🗑
Projectile   Any object that moves through the air or through space under the influence of gravity  
🗑
Element   Any material that is made up of only one type of atom  
🗑
Amphoteric   A description of a substance that can behave as either an acid or a base  
🗑
Chemical equation   A representation of a chemical reaction  
🗑
Matter   Anything that occupies space  
🗑
Interaction   Mutual action between objects in which each one exerts an equal and opposite force on the first object  
🗑
Concentration   A quantitative measure of the amount of solute in a solution  
🗑
Electromagnet   A magnet whose field is produced by an electric current it is usually in the form of a wire coil with a piece of iron inside the coil  
🗑
Inelastic collision   A collision in which the colliding objects become distorted generate heat and possibly stick together  
🗑
Transmutation   The conversion of an atomic nucleus of one element into an atomic nucleus of another element through a loss or gain in the number of protons  
🗑
Latent heat   Energy that is released or absorbed in a change of phase  
🗑
Molecule   A group of atoms held tightly together by covalent bonds  
🗑
Strong force   The powerful force that attracts nucleons to one another over a short distance  
🗑
Interference   The combined effect of two or more waves overlapping  
🗑
Quantum   A small discrete packet of light energy  
🗑
Vector quantity   A quantity that specifies direction as well as magnitude  
🗑
Dispersion   The separation of light into colors arranged by frequency  
🗑
Sublimation   The change of phase of a solid directly to a gas  
🗑
Hydronium ion   A water molecule after accepting a hydrogen ion  
🗑
Freezing   A transformation from a liquid to a solid  
🗑
Saturated   A solution containing the maximum amount of solute that will dissolve  
🗑
Equilibrium Rule   Rule which states that the vector sum of forces acting on a nonaccelerating object equals zero: SF=0  
🗑
Doppler effect   The charge in frequency of a wave due to the motion of the source( or due to the motion of the receiver)  
🗑
Alpha particle   The nucleus of a helium atom which consists of two neutrons and two protons ejected by certain radioactive elements  
🗑
Power   The time rate of work or rate at which energy is expended described by the relationship P=work/time  
🗑
Nonpolar bond   A chemical bond that has no dipole  
🗑
Salt   An ionic compound formed from the reaction between an acid and a base  
🗑
Ohms Law   The statement that the current in a circuit varies in direct proportion to the potential difference or voltage and inversely with the resistance: Current=voltage/resistance  
🗑
Chemical reaction   A Chemical change  
🗑
Physical model   A representation of an object on some convenient scale  
🗑
Specific heat capacity   The quantity of heat per unit mass required to raise the temperature of a substance by 1 degree celsius  
🗑
Basic research   Research dedicated to the discovery of the fundamental workings of nature  
🗑
Electric resistance   The property of a material that resists the flow of electric current through it it is measured in ohms (O)  
🗑
Chemical bond   The attraction between two atoms that holds them together in a compound  
🗑
Molarity   A unit of concentration equal to the number of moles of a solute per liter of solution  
🗑
Mass number   The total number of nucleons in an atomic nucleus  
🗑
Coefficient   A number used in a chemical equation to indicate either number of atoms/molecules or the number of moles a reactant or product  
🗑
Theory   A synthesis of a large body of information that encompasses well-tested hypotheses about certain aspects of the natural world  
🗑
Electric potential (voltage)   The electric potential energy per amount of charge measured in volts and often called voltage  
🗑
Solubility   The ability of a solute to dissolve in a give solvent  
🗑
Work energy theorem   Principle in which states the work done on an object equals the change in kinetic energy of the object W=?KE  
🗑
Work   The product of the force and the distance through which the force moves W=Fd  
🗑
Chemical properties   A property that relates to how a substance changes its chemical identity  
🗑
Conceptual model   A representation of a system that helps in making predictions about how the system behaves  
🗑
Acceleration   The rate at which velocity changes with time the change in velocity may be in magnitude or in in direction or in both it is usually measure in m/s2  
🗑
Potential energy   The stored energy that a body possesses because of its position  
🗑
Temperature   A measure of the hotness or coldness of substances related to the average translational kinetic energy per molecule in a substance measured in degrees Celsius Fahrenheit or Kelvin  
🗑
Solution   A homogeneous mixture in which all components are dissolved in the same phase  
🗑
Chemical change   During this kind of change atoms in a substance are rearranged to give a new substance having a new chemical identity  
🗑
First law of thermodynamics   A restatement of the law of energy conservation usually as it applies to systems involving changes in temperature whenever heat flows into or out of a system the gain or loss of thermal energy equals the amount of heat transferred  
🗑
Absolute zero   The theoretical temperature at which a substance possesses no thermal energy  
🗑
Reactant   A starting material in a chemical reaction appearing before the arrow in a chemical equation  
🗑
Elastic collision   A collision in which colliding objects rebound without lasting deformation or the generation of heat  
🗑
Nuclear fusion   The combining of nuclei of light atoms to form heavier nuclei with the release of much energy  
🗑
Magnetic force   Between magnets it is the attraction of unlike magnetic poles for each other and the repulsion between like magnetic poles between a magnetic field&a moving charge it is deflecting force due to the motion of the charge deflecting force is perpendicular  
🗑
Precipitate   A solute that has come out of solution  
🗑
Parallel circuity   An electric circuit with two or more devices connected in such a way that the same voltage acts across each one and any single one completes the circuit independently of all the others  
🗑
Atomic mass   The mass of an elements atoms listed in the periodic table as an average value based on the relative abundance of the elements isotopes  
🗑
Chain reaction   A self-sustaining reaction in which the products of one reaction event stimulate further reaction events  
🗑
Submicroscopic   The realm of atoms and molecules where objects are smaller that can be detected by optical microscopes  
🗑
Joule   The SI unit of energy and work equivalent to a newton-meter  
🗑
Electron-dot structure   A shorthand notation of the shell model of the atom in which valence electrons are shown around an atomic symbol  
🗑
Series circuit   An electric circuit with devices connected in such a way that the same electric current flows through each of them  
🗑
nucleon   A nuclear proton or neutron  
🗑
Group   A vertical column in the periodic table also known as a family of elements  
🗑
Parabola   The curved path followed by a projectile near the earth under the influence of gravity only  
🗑
Free fall   Motion under the influence of gravitation pull only  
🗑
Corrosion   The deterioration of a metal typically caused by atmospheric oxygen  
🗑
Solid   Matter that has a definite volume and definite shape  
🗑
Resultant   The net result of a combination of two or more vectors  
🗑
Newtons first law of motion   Law which states every objects continues in a state of rest or in a state of motion in a straight line at a constant speed unless it is compelled to change that state by forces exerted on it  
🗑
Neutralization   A reaction in which an acid and base combine to form a salt  
🗑
Isotopes   Different forms of an element whose atoms contain the same number of protons but different number of neutrons  
🗑
Nonmental   An element located toward the upper right of the periodic table and is neither a metal nor a metalloid  
🗑
Newton   The scientific unit of force  
🗑
Solvent   The component in a solution present in the largest amount  
🗑
Metalloid   An element that exhibits some properties of metals and some properties of nonmetals  
🗑
Law   A general hypothesis or statement about the relationship of natural quantities that has been tested over and over again and has not been contradicted also known as a principle  
🗑
Second law of thermodynamic   Law which states heat never spontaneously flows from a low temperature substance to a high temperature substance Also all systems tend to become more and more disordered as time goes by  
🗑
Centripetal force   Any force that is directed at right angles to the path of a moving objects and tends to prduce circular motion  
🗑
Potential difference   The difference in potential between two points measured in volts and often called voltage difference  
🗑
Natural Frequency   A frequency at which an elastic object naturally tends to vibrate  
🗑
Universal constant of gravitation   That proportionality constant in newtons law of gravitation  
🗑
Chemical reaction   A rearrangement of atoms so that one or more new compound are formed from preexisting compounds or elements  
🗑
Escape speed   The speed that a projectile space probe or similar object must reach in order to escape the gravitational influence of the earth or of another celestial body to which it is attracted  
🗑
Electromagnetic induction   The induction of voltage when a magnetic field changes with time  
🗑
Combustion   An exothermic oxidation reduction reaction between a nonmetallic material molecular oxygen  
🗑
Product   A new material formed in a chemical reaction appearing after the arrow in a chemical equation  
🗑
Weightlessness   A condition encountered in freefall wherein a support force is lacking  
🗑
Metal   An element that is shiny opaque and able to conduct electricity and heat  
🗑
Support force   The force that supports and object against gravity often called the normal force  
🗑
Diffusion   The tendency of molecules to move from an area of high concentration to one of low concentration  
🗑
Amplitude   The distance from the midpoint to the crest (or the trough) of the wave  
🗑
thermodynamics   The study of heat and it transformation to different forms of energy  
🗑
Periodic table   A chart in which all know elements are listed in order of atomic number  
🗑
Atomic Mass unit (AMU)   The standard unit of atomic mass which is equal to one-twelfth the mass of the common atom of carbon arbitrarily given the value of exactly 12  
🗑
Basic solution   A solution in which the hydroxide ion concentration is higher than the hydronium ion concentration  
🗑
Faradays law   Law which states an electric field is induced in any region of space in which a magnetic field is changing with time the magnitude of the induced electric field is proportional to the rate at which the field changes the direction of the induced magnetic  
🗑
Soluble   Capable of dissolving to an appreciable extent in a given solvent  
🗑
Polar bond   A chemical bond that has a dipole  
🗑
Weight   Simply stated the force of gravity on an object more specifically the gravitational force with which a body presses against a supporting surface  
🗑
Mass   The quantity of matter in an object more specifically it is a measure of the inertia or sluggishness that an object exhibits in response to any effort made to start it stop deflect it or change its state of motion in any way  
🗑
Law of universal gravitation   Law which states everybody in the universe attracts every other body with a mutually attracting force for two bodies this force is directly proportional to the square of the distance separating them F=G m1 (;m2/d2  
🗑
Quantum hypothesis   The idea that light energy is contained in discrete packets called quanta  
🗑


   

Review the information in the table. When you are ready to quiz yourself you can hide individual columns or the entire table. Then you can click on the empty cells to reveal the answer. Try to recall what will be displayed before clicking the empty cell.
 
To hide a column, click on the column name.
 
To hide the entire table, click on the "Hide All" button.
 
You may also shuffle the rows of the table by clicking on the "Shuffle" button.
 
Or sort by any of the columns using the down arrow next to any column heading.
If you know all the data on any row, you can temporarily remove it by tapping the trash can to the right of the row.

 
Embed Code - If you would like this activity on your web page, copy the script below and paste it into your web page.

  Normal Size     Small Size show me how
Created by: mbrant1
Popular Science sets