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Vinegar is a homogeneous mixture of water and acetic acid.
No, it is homogeneous.
Cider vinegar is not a pure substance it is a mixture. It contains water, acetic acid and flavouring agents. As there is only one phase present ie no gas or solids it is a homogeneous mixture.
Rice grits is homogeneous, corn grits is homogeneous, rice and corn grits mixed is heterogeneous.
Medicines may be homogeneous or heterogeneous.
Vinegar is a homogeneous mixture of water and acetic acid.
The orange juice is not a homogeneous mixture.
That depends on what kind of vinegar you are asking about. Pure vinegar is a compound composed of Vinegar is acetic acid (HC2H3O2) but the vinegar you buy in a store is a homogeneous mixture of acetic acid and water.
Nitric acid is homogeneous.
Vinegar is mainly diluted acetic acid. For a much longer and more complete explanation, see the question "What is vinegar?".
No, it is homogeneous.
Yes. More specifically, it is a solution.
Homogeneous.
No, a sulfuric acid solution in water is homogeneous
No, it is a homogeneous mixture of water and acetic acid.
Cider vinegar is not a pure substance it is a mixture. It contains water, acetic acid and flavouring agents. As there is only one phase present ie no gas or solids it is a homogeneous mixture.
H2SO4 is sulfuric acid, which is a pure substance called a compound, which by definition is homogeneous matter, but is not a mixture, unless you dilute it with water, in which case it would be an aqueous solution of sulfuric acid, and would be a homogeneous mixture in that case.