Yes. If it dissolves in water it is soluble. Sugar, salt, soap are all soluble. Try it.
Example: some hydroxides are suluble in water but other aren't soluble.
sport drinks have a lower water content but higher water suluble content than your body
Phloroglucinol is not so suluble in water (1o g/L); dissolve 10 g phloroglucinol in 100 mL demineralized water.
This means substance X does not readily dissolve in water to form a homogeneous mixture. When mixed with water, substance X will likely remain in its solid or liquid form without dispersing evenly throughout the water.
Sugar water is a solution in which sugar is the solute and water is the solvent. The water dissolves the sugar.
Sugar is solute Water is the solvent Sweetened water is the solution
No, sugar is not a solution. Sugar water is a solution of sugar and water, but sugar itself is not.
No, sugar is not a solution. Sugar water is a solution of sugar and water, but sugar itself is not.
The sugar melted and disolved to water.
When sugar is dissolved in water, water is called a SOLVENT
Sugar is soluble in water, meaning it can dissolve in water to form a homogeneous solution.
Water is the solvent, and sugar is the solute.