Yes, the water solution of sodium chloride is an electrolyte.
A solution of salt (NaCl) is an electrolyte.
A salt solution is an electrolyte.
Sodium chloride is an electrolyte only and because can be dissociated in ions: in water solutions or when is melted.
A salt solution is an electrolyte.
A salt solution is an electrolyte.
Salt is an electrolyte in water solution or when is melted.
Salt added to water form a solution, an electrolyte.
Solid salt is a non-electrolyte; salt solution or molten salt are electrolytes.
This is a solution of a dissociated ionic salt for example.
This is a solution of a dissociated ionic salt for example.
A salt, acid or base which can be dissociated in ions in an aqueous solution.
Methyl alcohol by itself is not an electrolyte. By definition, an electrolyte is something containing free ions. If you took methyl alcohol and dissolved a salt in it, the resulting solution would indeed by an electrolyte solution. However, methyl alcohol by itself is not an electrolyte.