A molecule is so small that if you drop 1 down the end of a straw it takes 36 years till it comes out the other end ...40 if its a slow molecule
Liquid hydrogen is so cold that if you drop a block of ice into it, it turns into barbecue.
Take a wax ball and an iron ball of the same size. The wax ball is light because the molecules are so spread out. The iron ball is heavy because the molecules are so tight they have to have rent control.
Evaporation is when a molecule leaves in the middle of the night and there's a blank space on the wall where your painting used to be.
A molecule of ice cream would be the smallest piece of ice cream in the world. 2 would be the smallest sundae.
What a thing is like; whether it stretches and bounces like a rubber ball, or is brittle like a cup and saucer, depends upon the arrangement of its molecules and its upbringing as a child.
Atoms make up molecules, and molecules make up everything in the world (but nothing on Mars).
Suppose you could make yourself so small that you could crawl inside of a tiny drop of water - well please take a snorkel.
Atoms are like letters, molecules are like words; 2 molecules of argon spell "Shut up!"
There is only one liquid element in the first 92 elements and that's called 'weirdo.'
All life must contain the carbon atom in its molecules and an oxygen atom in its molecules - a roof over its head wouldn't hurt either.
Electrical charges and neutral particles make up atoms, atoms make up molecules, and molecules make up stories.
The nucleus is in the center of an atom, and inside of that, packed tightly together, is the oldcleus.
Electrons go around the nucleus much the same way as the planets go around the sun and bums go round asking for handouts.
Electrons are so light that it would take more than 3 hundred thousand million, million, million, million of them to mug a drunken sailor.
The simplest atom of them all is hydrogen. It was held back a year, graduated late, and had to go to technical school.
The electric current flows in wires so fast that in a single second it will travel around the world 7 and one half times or at least as far as the length of the wire and back.
Based on lines from Picture Book of Molecules and Atoms By Jerome S. Meyer, a 1947 Science book for kids.

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