Salt is very soluble in water and soluble in formamide, propylenglycol, glycerine.
Because clay is not a salt; it's a mineral. However, clay particles can be so minute that they become invisible colloids in water.
Yes. Salt is known as soluble, meaning it will dissolve in water.
yes it will - grit is sodium chloride, or commonly known as salt. Salt does dissolve.
Vinegar is a polar solvent and salt is a polar solute. Therefore vinegar dissolves salt. Plus, salt's are very soluable and will almost always completely disassociate when added to water(you vinegar isn't 100% vinegar, there's also lots of plain water than salt can dissolve in.)
Iodized salt, due to its relatively smaller crystal size. The smaller the salt crystals, the faster they will dissolve.
salt
salt water
Because clay is not a salt; it's a mineral. However, clay particles can be so minute that they become invisible colloids in water.
Water because salt is soluble and will completely dissolve in water.
Yes it does dissociate, and dissolve completely in water, as KBr is an ionic salt.
Water dissolve easily salt.
No, but salt does dissolve in water.
The two minerals dissolve in hot water to form solutions are sugar and salt. They will form a homogeneous solution as they completely dissolve in water.
The two minerals dissolve in hot water to form solutions are sugar and salt. They will form a homogeneous solution as they completely dissolve in water.
I would immerse it completely in water and leave overnight then leave it to dry completely before cleaning with silver polish. The salt should dissolve in its own good time.
it dissolves into the water that's why after a couple of minutes it's completely gone
Salt is a solid; water can dissolve candies.