The oil is white and solid at common temperatures, fusing at from 70 to 80 degrees.
From the seeds of the Pongamia glabra, or Galidupa arborea, a honey brown and almost tasteless oil is procured, which is fluid at common temperatures, but gelatinises at 55 degrees.
It is solid at common temperatures, and begins to melt at about 70 degrees.
It is perfectly fluid at common temperatures, but begins to gelatinise when cooled below 50 degrees.
These results are abundantly sufficient to show that the mere mechanical cleansing of the surface of the platina is sufficient to enable it to exert its combining power over oxygen and hydrogen at common temperatures.
Silver and copper could not be made to show any effect at common temperatures.
Phosphorus in its normal condition is a pale yellow, semi-transparent, and highly combustible solid; soft and flexible at common temperatures; it becomes waxy at about 75 deg.
Sodium is a soft silver-white metal, scarcely solid at common temperatures, fuses at 194 deg.
In dry air it does not oxidise at common temperatures; but at a red heat it soon becomes covered with a scaly coating of black oxide, and at an intense white heat burns brilliantly with the production of the same substance.
On the Fluidity of Sulphur and Phosphorus at common temperatures, by Mr. Faraday.
It is very hard at common temperatures, but soft and yielding at a red heat.
In the metallic state it is of a light, reddish-grey color, rather brittle, and only fusible at a strong white heat; at common temperatures it is unalterable by air or water.
At common temperatures, it is unalterable either in dry or moist air.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "common temperatures" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.