Yes, because many things(salt, sugar...) can dissolve into water.
No, sugar is the solute. The water is the solvent.Sugar is the solute, (the thing being dissolved) and the water is the solvent, (the thing that the solute is being dissolved in)
Water is the solvent, and sugar is the solute.
Water is the solvent.Salt is the solute.
Water can be a solute under some circumstances. For example, if 1cm3 of water is added to 100cm3 of ethanol, an ethanolic solution is formed in which ethanol is the solvent and water is the solute!!!note: a solute is that which is less in quantity and solvent is which is more in quantity
Water is the solvent and chalk is the solute.
No, sugar is the solute. The water is the solvent.Sugar is the solute, (the thing being dissolved) and the water is the solvent, (the thing that the solute is being dissolved in)
Water is the solvent, and sugar is the solute.
Water is the solvent.Salt is the solute.
The sugar is the solute and the water is the solvent. Whatever is dissolved is the solute, and whatever the solute is dissolved in is the solvent. The solvent dissolves the solute.
No, salt is the solute and water is the solvent
Water can be a solute under some circumstances. For example, if 1cm3 of water is added to 100cm3 of ethanol, an ethanolic solution is formed in which ethanol is the solvent and water is the solute!!!note: a solute is that which is less in quantity and solvent is which is more in quantity
The nature of solute and solvent will determine the solubility. When they are alike, they dissolve easily. A good example is water and sugar.
Water is not a solute, it is the most important solvent.
In a water solution sugar is the solute.
Water is the solvent and chalk is the solute.
Jello's solute is the gelatin the solvent is water
its called a solute. so in the water-salt mix, the water is thesolvent n the salt is the solute. -PJ