No you can't.
People can get Ringworm from: 1) direct skin-to-skin contact with an infected person or pet, 2) indirect contact with an object or surface that an infected person or pet has touched, or 3) rarely, by contact with soil.
Sugar is solute Water is the solvent Sweetened water is the solution
No, sugar is not a solution. Sugar water is a solution of sugar and water, but sugar itself is not.
Sugar becomes what is know as aqueous( dissolved in solution with the water) this is the process of water molecules breaking and surrounding ions in he sugar so for each sugar molecule several water molecules will be bonded to it thus why if you put enough sugar into water it cant dissolve all of it as there are not enough water molecules to surround the sugar.
Redered radioactive, due to the formation of positrons and neutrinos as the sugar is ionized.
No it can't. you see sugar and water is a solution, so if you freeze it the sugar and water are still frozen together. You can't exactly evaporate sugar and you can evaporate water that's how you get separate the two. Thx.
Yes.
For the most part, yes. Ringworm is a fungus and it hates the salt water! It dries the fungus up and it may start to peel-which is a good sign.
KIll it before it do something horrible ... or simply ignore it..........
Sugar water is a solution in which sugar is the solute and water is the solvent. The water dissolves the sugar.
Sugar is solute Water is the solvent Sweetened water is the solution
No, sugar is not a solution. Sugar water is a solution of sugar and water, but sugar itself is not.
No, sugar is not a solution. Sugar water is a solution of sugar and water, but sugar itself is not.
The sugar melted and disolved to water.
Water is the solvent, and sugar is the solute.
Chickenpox and ringworm are caused by completely different microbes. You can only get ringworm from someone with chickenpox if they also have ringworm.
Sugar is soluble in water forming a sugar solution. The sugar would be the solute. The water would be the solvent.
Yes. Sugar is soluble in water.