Using Hydrochloric Acid (Okay)

By Anonymous (not verified), 16 March, 2026
Hydrochloric Acid Concentrated or diluted HCl has to be handled carefully because it burns. Keep it in glass bottles and away from metal stuff. Safety glasses, gloves, and old clothes are good to wear, not short-sleeved shirts, shorts, or sandals. The fumes can knock you out! When acid spills on you, rinse it with water. Use a bandage for small burns. With serious burns, you just might think about goint to a doctor or you just mite die!!!! In the lab when diluting, pore the acid into the water. In titration, use a burro to measure what HCl you need for the sodium hydrocarbonate. That’ll help you measure the base. To get rid of leftovers, neutralize and flush it. If you spill HCl, use baking soda.
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Workplace Writing Rubric

Name:

Title:

Ideas

The writing . . .

  • has a clear, central message.
  • provides details that support the central message.

Organization

  • begins by capturing the reader’s interest and introducing the message.
  • develops the message in the middle paragraphs.
  • ends by reviewing the message or making a call to action.

Voice

  • sounds knowledgeable and informed.
  • speaks in a voice appropriate to the audience.

Word Choice

  • uses precise nouns and active verbs.

Sentence Fluency

  • uses a variety of sentence lengths and beginnings.
  • flows smoothly from one sentence to another.

Conventions

  • uses end punctuation and commas correctly.
  • correctly capitalizes first words and proper nouns.
  • avoids spelling errors.
  • correctly uses words (there, they’re, their).
  • follows the correct format for the type of message.

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