No, luckily one can eat soup with a silver tablespoon, stirr with a silver teaspoon, etc.
Silver nitrate does not react with water, it dissolves in it.
If both silver nitrate and sodium chloride are dissolved in water and mixed, there will be a reaction to precipitate silver chloride. Solid silver nitrate and sodium chloride will not normally react.
No reaction.
For example the product of the reaction between sodium chloride and silver nitrate is the insoluble silver chloride.
confusion
There would be no reaction because they are both chlorides.
No reaction.
simply : 'no'. The classic reaction is 'acid + base = salt + water'. The reaction here is that of silver ion with the chloride ion in the acid. A white precipitate of insoluble silver chloride forms. This reaction is that used for testing for chloride ions.
When silver interacts with oxygen it creates silver oxide. It is a similar reaction as to when water interacts with iron.
you find yourself
No chemical reaction.
Silver carbonate is not soluble in water; any reaction with sodium chloride.