Multiple Choice, Single Answer
Read the passage and answer the question.
Glass is often called a solid, but at the molecular level it behaves oddly. When most liquids cool, their atoms snap into the neat, repeating grid of a crystal. Molten glass, however, is cooled so quickly that its atoms freeze in place before they can organise, locking into the same disordered tangle they had as a liquid. Because of this jumbled structure, scientists classify glass as an amorphous solid rather than a true crystal. A persistent myth claims that old windows are thicker at the bottom because glass slowly flows downward, but the real cause is simply the uneven way panes were once manufactured.
Unofficial practice item, scored entirely in your browser. Not affiliated with any test provider.