Expression talk:frieren

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This article (frieren) needs attention because:
DMs lacking precision -- Purodha Blissenbach 08:10, 24 July 2006 (CEST)
It has been added to this category for attention. Thank you for your patience.

None of those Definition appears to be good:

+ To reach a chemically solid state, by the process of cooling.

  • Due to the relation between temperature, pressure, and volume, sometimes cooling is not obvious, or not even there, you can at best say: "(usually by colling)"
  • Although chemists have a lot to bother with aggregate states, the aggregate states themselves are in the domain of physics. Sorry to say so, I know that it is uncommon to be aware of the fact, and "chemically solid" has probably a broader base of understanding than, say, "physically solid" which is btw, ambigous.
Since there will be a domain for the DM, we could probably say: "To make the transit from gas or fluid to solid state (e.g. by being cooled)"

+ To become and remain uncomfortably cold (usually referring to animals, especially humans).

  • Plants don't freeze?
  • Also, to be precise, men and animals being not deu:wechselwarm mainly hold their body temperature while freezig, for those, physilocially the feeling of freezing arises out of different temperatures inside and outside, .
  • The bracket is actually a domain reference, is it not?
Suggestion: "surrounding temperatuere of lifestock becoming or being uncomfortably cold.

+ Be at a temperature of 0°C or less, or reach 0°C, or slip below 0°C. (Mostly used in weather conte...

  • The bracket is actually a domain reference, is it not? As such, should it rather be avoided?
  • Sample sentence from a weather forecast: "Morgen friert es in Nordbayern" (Tomorrow it will be freezing in Noth Bavaria)
There is the word solidify that includes the process of freezing.. Freezing is as far as I am aware the process by cooling it in order to solidify. GerardM 08:18, 24 July 2006 (CEST)
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