No, it is a pure substance.
no, table sugar and salt are compounds.
NaCl, KCl
The examples of homogenous mixtures are table salt,table sugar,brass,air,sodium chloride solution,sugar solution,brandy and wines.that is all I got.
a homogeneous mixture is pizza and lemonade and sauce and cece because she is human.
Yes, table salt (sodium chloride) is a pure substance because it is made up of only one type of molecule, which is sodium chloride. It does not contain any impurities or mixtures of other substances.
salt and ice are the freezing mixtures of ice.
A homogeneous solution is a solution without interfaces (a particle with visible sides/something floating around that is not completely saturated) that is not opaque. A heterogeneous solution is a solution with interfaces. A colloid is a solution that has no interfaces but is opaque. Saltwater (with the salt completely dissolved) is a homogeneous solution; water with sand mixed in is heterogeneous because it will eventually separate and the sand has interfaces: and skim milk is a colloid because it is opaque but has no interfaces.
Yes, like all ungulates caribou love their salt. Much of what they eat is deprived of sodium, thus they develop a craving for salt (such as table salt, which contains sodium, and from which most livestock salt-blocks and salt-mineral mixtures contain) which can only be satisfied if they find a salt deposit were they can satiate their cravings.
There are no mixtures on the periodic table. They're just elements.
salt water.
Table salt is a salt - sodium chloride (NaCl).
Table salt is made up of smaller clumps of particles than rock salt. To dissolve, particles of the salt must come in contact with the solvent particles than rock salt, resulting in faster dissolving. (Copied from the Pure Substance & Mixtures Section of some Nelson Literacy Science Text Book) :)