Tell me what else is in the solution.
Solution containing a liter of vinegar plus a tablespoon of salt--the vinegar is the solvent.
Solution containing a liter of vinegar plus a thousand liters of water--the water is the solvent. (Solutes can be either solid, liquid or gas--oxygen, a gas; diethylene glycol, a liquid; and salt, a solid, all dissolve in water.)
eggshells (solute) vinegar (solvent)
Yes, vinegar is made up mostly of acetic acid diluted in water, making it an aqueous solution of an acid.
A solution contain a solute and a solvent; examples are brine, vodka and vinegar.
No, solvent and solution are different. A solvent is the substance that dissolves another substance, while a solution is the mixture of a solvent with solute particles dissolved in it.
Vinegar is basically a solution of acetic acid in water. Therefore acetic acid is the solute and water is the solvent. See this site for information about dissolving and solutions: http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/ks3bitesize/science/chemistry/physical_changes_8.shtml
no
Vinegar is already a solution with water as it's solvent, and Acetic acidic as the solute. So, yes if you pour vinegar into water it will dissolve.
Vinegar is a sour-tasting liquid which is obtained by fermenting dilute alcoholic liquids. The solute in vinegar is acetic acid and the solvent is water.
In a copper sulfate solution, copper sulfate is the solute and water is the solvent.
Yes, in this case you would have an aqueous solution of sodium chloride and acetic acid.
the solvent
yes it never settles it is homogeneous! Vinegar is a solution of water and acetic acid. It is often diluted to a specific acidity (5% is very common)