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no salt is not a liquid but salt can be dissolved in liquid water which is then called an aqueous solution.
Salt is not kept outside the shop.
A simple example is any substance which is soluble in a liquid. If you dissolve salt (sodium chloride) in water it will undergo a physical change. If you then evaporate the water the salt will reappear. All substances are capable of undergoing a physical or chemical change. If you heat salt it will become liquid, a physical change, if you then pass an electrical current through it it will break down into sodium and chlorine, a chemical change.
yes by heating and solid like sugar and salt take the shape of container in which they are kept
Open salt is a uncovered kitchenware which contain salt.
When butter is kept open in summer than it reacts at room temperature with air and produces salt as waste product of the reaction😉😉😉
When NaCl is dissolved in a jar, it undergoes a physical change. This is because the chemical composition of NaCl remains the same, but its physical state changes from a solid to a liquid solution. The salt can be reclaimed by evaporating the liquid and it would still have the same chemical properties as the original NaCl.
common salt in water (liquid)is colorless/when melts its colorless again.
Water and salt form a solution in the liquid phase.
Because it is made up of small, solid particles.
Evaporate the liquid.