No. a salt is just a metallic ion and a non metallic ion combine through an acid neutralization reaction. Different salts all taste different and all five basic tastes are covered by salts (i.e. sweet, salty, sour, bitter, savoury). for example lead diacetate has a sweet test, however it is harmful to digest it. the term salty (as in the taste) refers to the taste of sodium chloride (common table salt). hope this helped :)
yes everything does
and everything contains sugar too
no, for example, air.
All cooking salts are salty, not all salts are. Gipsum is a salt, but has no discernable taste at all. It is so bland that it is used as a filler and bulker in some food items, and its natural fire resistant properties make it perfect for drywall.
Because sea water has high concentration of salts.
I suspect they are after the salty taste as a result of the salts in the cured mortar.
These lakes have no outlets to carry the salts away to the sea.
All water, even rain water, contains dissolved chemicals which scientists call "salts." But not all water tastes salty. Water is fresh or salty according to individual judgment, and in making this decision man is more convinced by his sense of taste than by a laboratory test. It is one's taste buds that accept one water and reject another.
because salts from land gather to sea with riverwater and salts do not eveporate
putrid is to rotten/fermented as salty is to taste.
it is a base it has a sour taste
they are salty
You're right, it doesn't. Rain is water that has evaporated and then condensed. Evaporation means that things like salts will be left behind.
It taste salty because your body be dirty please wash up.
They taste bitter horrible,I hate them.