As long as there are no tea leaves or other solid particles in the tea, yes it is homogeneous.
Homogeneous
Yes, filtered tea is homogeneous mixture.
Yes, they are homogeneous mixtures (for the tea after filtering).
If there are no tea leaves in the mixture, then it is a homogeneous mixture, or solution. If there are tea leaves present, then it would be a heterogeneous mixture.
Iced tea, with sugar completely dissolved in it, is an example of homogeneous matter
Sweetened tea would be a HOMOGENEOUS mixture.
First of all, what is homogeneous? Wikipedia has a good definition for it, "A substance that is uniform in composition," and from Wikipedia's definition we can now judge whether or not tea is homogeneous. It really depends on what kind of tea it is. If the tea has no leaves, or no particles that you can see in the bottom... and it is just the tea (liquid) itself then it is a homogeneous solution, but if there are residues/particles/tea leaves on the bottom is no longer homogeneous but a heterogeneous mixture. Note: Not only do you look in the bottom, but look at the tea itself too. :)
It is a heterogeneous mixture.
Brewed tea is a homogeneous mixture because the water and tea leaves combine to form a uniform solution where the components are evenly distributed.
its a homogeneous because the ingrediets are combined but a heterogeneous is when you can acctually see all the ingredients but not combined.
Yes.
It depends how you make it. If you put the loose leaves in water then drink it straight away it's heterogeneous. If the leaves are big and you sieve them out (or use a tea bag which you remove) it's probably homogeneous, but sometimes tiny solid particles can escape the sieve or tea bag.