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salt is disolvable in water and sand is not
salt is salty, sugar is sugary
Both sugar and salt are white, very small, and grainy like sand. A few chemical similarities are that salt and sugar are both water soluble, humans need both salt and sugar to survive, and both can burn.
there is salt in salt water and little salt in fresh water
Sugar and salt are scientifically different because salt is sodium chloride NaCl were as sugar is C12H22O11 12carbon atoms per every 22 hydrogen and 12 carbons. Also sugar is sweet were as salt is salty.
salt is disolvable in water and sand is not
salt is salty, sugar is sugary
Both sugar and salt are white, very small, and grainy like sand. A few chemical similarities are that salt and sugar are both water soluble, humans need both salt and sugar to survive, and both can burn.
Salt and sugar have different chemical appearences and shapes. Their taste is also different!
The only real difference is they are different sizes and the crocodiles can survive in salt water, most other things are the same, exempt for a few physical differences.
the water has no salt and the sea water has salt
Rock salt (impure salt) is frequently colored.
by smelling it
there is salt in salt water and little salt in fresh water
what are the differences between an acaid, a base and a salt
Sugar and salt are scientifically different because salt is sodium chloride NaCl were as sugar is C12H22O11 12carbon atoms per every 22 hydrogen and 12 carbons. Also sugar is sweet were as salt is salty.
The similarities are less fundamental than the differences, and I will briefly note them: sugar and salt have very similar appearances, both normally are white granular substances as sold in grocery stores, both are edible, and both are used as flavoring agents, both are water soluble. However, in terms of their chemistry and composition, they are utterly different. They have no chemical elements in common, sugar being composed of carbon, hyrogen, and oxygen, and table salt being composed of sodium and chlorine. Sugar is an organic compound and salt is inorganic. Sugar can be burned and salt can't. Salt in water is corrosive to metal; sugar isn't. Etc.