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Answer:
The motion of the gas particles is random and in a straight-line.
Step-by-step explanation:
According to the kinetic hypothesis, a gas is made up of a huge number of submicroscopic particles (atoms or molecules) that are all in continual, random motion. The swiftly moving particles clash with one another and with the container's walls on a regular basis. The phrase ideal gas refers to a hypothetical gas made up of molecules that adhere to a few rules: The molecules of an ideal gas do neither attract or repel one another. The sole interaction between perfect gas molecules would be an elastic collision when they collided or an elastic collision with the container's walls.