the same product regardless who sells it
commodity
milk
California's number one legal commodity is dairy products--milk, butter and cheese. California's number one commodity is marijuana, but you're not supposed to be growing that.
A Commodity Product is any homogenous goods traded in bulk on an exchange. Example: 1.Corn 2.Oats 3.Rough Rice 4.Soybeans 5.Rapeseed 6.Soybean Oil 7.Wheat 8.Milk 9.Cocoa 10.Coffee 11.Cotton 12.Sugar
no it is not because of the stomach
A commodity is something sold primarily on price rather than on some characteristic of the product. Because non-organic cow's milk is pretty much the same no matter where you get it, it is sold primarily on price and is therefore considered a commodity. Specialty milks--organic, lactose-free, flavored, from Jersey cattle--are sold on a particular characteristic of the product, so they're not commodities.
commodity
milk
There is no chemical solution for milk because milk is not a chemical. Milk is usually considered a type of colloid.
California's number one legal commodity is dairy products--milk, butter and cheese. California's number one commodity is marijuana, but you're not supposed to be growing that.
because of the absence of Iron and Vitamin A
A Commodity Product is any homogenous goods traded in bulk on an exchange. Example: 1.Corn 2.Oats 3.Rough Rice 4.Soybeans 5.Rapeseed 6.Soybean Oil 7.Wheat 8.Milk 9.Cocoa 10.Coffee 11.Cotton 12.Sugar
Solutions are considered homogeneous mixtures because dissolved solute is found in even proportions throughout the solvent.
No, milk is not alive.
No, coffee with milk is not a solution. It would be considered a suspension because the milk can still separate after some time has passed.
I don't think so, because it's processed milk
'Got Milk' by Californian dairy producers is the most successful example of using branding to turn around a food commodity. Zespri kiwifruit out of New Zealand is another example of building value with admittedly a niche product in a commodity market.