Silver sulfide is a salt. but common "salt" or table salt is sodium chloride.
with silver polish (just take all the salt out first)
Salt never goes bad.
Silver nitrate (AgNO3) is a silver salt.
Passing salt was not bad luck. Spilling salt was bad luck because in Roman days, salt was very expensive.
Silver Bromide is AgBr. It is the salt produced from silver and bromine.
Silver sulfide is composed of silver, a metal, and sulfur, a non-metal; therefore, it is an ionic compound and a salt.
salt is bad for health because the cell shrinks when the salt goes into the cell
When silver nitrate reacts with a salt solution, a precipitation of silver chloride, silver bromide, or silver iodide occurs. These solid precipitates are formed when the chloride, bromide, or iodide ions from the salt solution react with the silver ions from the silver nitrate. The specific precipitate formed depends on the type of salt and its anions present in the solution.
you burn the salt in a contained environment
Silver nitrate will dissolve in distilled water. When added to a salt solution silver chloride will fall out of solution.
Dissolve them in water and add some sodium chloride. The silver salt will form a precipitate (as silver chloride), the calcium salt will not.