solute
Nope - the substance being dissolved is the solute. The solution in which the substance is being dissolved - is the solvent.
The substance that dissolves in a solvent to form a solution is called the solute. It can exist in various forms such as a solid, liquid, or gas. The amount of solute that can dissolve in a solvent depends on factors like temperature and pressure.
Because a solution by definition is disolved particles. Once disolved, it is very difficult to separate. A solution is homogeneous.
The substance being dissolved in a solution is called a solute.
A solute is the substance disolved in a liquid in solution; it is often solid. For example, NaCl, or table salt, is the solute in a salt water solution.
If I have interpreted the question correctly, the answer is the solute.
The substance (usually a liquid) that can dissolve another substance is called a solvent.The substance that is being dissolved in a solution is called the solute.
The disolved part of a solution is the SOLUTE and the one dissolving it is called the SOLVENT
The solute gets dissolved by the solvent.
the to parts in a solution are a solute the thing that gets disolved and a slovent the thing that disolves the solute
The solute and the solvent...you can tell them apart because thesolute is: in a solution a substance that is dissolved in a solvent andthe solvent is, in a solution the substance that dissolves a solute and makes up the largest percentage of a solution.
Solvent