Yes! milk is soluble in water.
Milk of magnesia is not soluble in water.
Milk is mostly water, which is very polar. Sugar (sucrose) is also a rather polar molecule. So, polar compounds dissolve readily in polar solvents. That is why sugar easily dissolves in milk.
No, it is not water soluble.
No it is not soluble in water it is soluble in chloroform, alcohol, methnol
Dolomite is not water soluble.
Milk of magnesia is not soluble in water.
Yes, milk powder is soluble in water. Otherwise you'd get chunky milk when you went to use it!
Cream actually is not water soluble, which is why it tends to float to the top of milk, and requires a special process to mix it in, if you want your milk to be homogenized.
No. You have it the wrong way. Salt is more soluble in hot water than in cold water.
A guess: because it is water soluble.
Water soluble things are all the things that get dissolved in water completely and homogeneously. A few common examples are salt, sugar, alum, copper sulphate and powdered milk.
Milk is mostly water, which is very polar. Sugar (sucrose) is also a rather polar molecule. So, polar compounds dissolve readily in polar solvents. That is why sugar easily dissolves in milk.
Water soluble.
Of course it is!
No
fat soluble vitamins are stored in our fat tissues and water soluble vitamins are soluble in water.
Partially soluble in water, Soluble in hot water.