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No, a gas cannot have a boiling point. The boiling point is the temperature at which a substance changes from its liquid state to its gaseous state, or vice versa. It is a characteristic property of liquids, not gases. When a liquid is heated to its boiling point, it undergoes a phase transition and turns into a gas. Conversely, when a gas is cooled, it undergoes condensation and becomes a liquid. Gases, on the other hand, have a property called the condensation point, which is the temperature at which a gas becomes a liquid when cooled under constant pressure.

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