No. Table salt is inorganic.
Calcium is a chemical element not a compound.
All organic compounds contain carbon; most inorganic compounds doesn't contain carbon.
NaCl is sodium chloride, an inorganic salt, with ionic bonds.
Deer is unedible if you try and eat it your head will explode
Sodium chloride is a solid, salt, inorganic compound; NaCl exist in the nature as the mineral halite. It is the most important food additive.
SC, or sulfur carbon, is not a commonly recognized compound in chemistry. However, if you are referring to sulfur-containing organic compounds or carbon-sulfur compounds, these can be both organic or inorganic depending on their structure and bonding. Generally, organic compounds contain carbon-hydrogen bonds, while inorganic compounds do not. Therefore, without more specific context, it's difficult to classify SC definitively as organic or inorganic.
Examples: - solid, liquid or gas - organic or inorganic - colored or colorless - pure or impure - single compound or a mixture - toxic or not - natural or artificial etc.
inorganic
Geologists classify silver as a mineral because it is naturally occurring, inorganic, solid, has a specific chemical composition (pure silver, Ag), and possesses a crystalline structure. These characteristics meet the criteria for something to be classified as a mineral.
Polluting substances.... But in all seriousness, anything toxic and unedible would probably pollute your water.
Examples:- solid, liquid, gas- soluble in water or insoluble- organic or inorganic- acidic, basic, neutraletc.
you can not classify this. How can you classify them?