oil
No, spirits cannot be dissolved in water. Spirits are compounds that are typically insoluble in water and will not mix or dissolve into it.
One example of a solid that cannot be dissolved in water is sand. Sand is primarily composed of silica, which is not soluble in water due to its strong covalent bonds. When mixed with water, sand will settle at the bottom as it does not interact with water molecules to form a solution.
Sand cannot be dissolved in water as it is a nonpolar substance, while water is a polar solvent. However, sand can be dissolved in certain acids such as hydrofluoric acid or in molten metals at high temperatures.
rajya sabha cannot be dissolved
When molten or dissolved in water it can but in its standard, solid state it cannot.
This question does not make sense i does not tell us what has been disolved in the water so we cannot find the answer
Sugar dissolved in water is a mixture. The sugar molecule is a compound (composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen atoms), while water is also a compound (composed of hydrogen and oxygen atoms). When sugar is dissolved in water, it forms a homogeneous mixture known as a solution.
The oxygen dissolved in water is a measure of dissolved oxygen (DO).
Most dissolved solids and gases, such as salts and dissolved organic compounds, cannot be removed from water by simple filtration. These substances are too small to be physically stopped by a filter and require additional treatment methods, such as reverse osmosis or distillation.
the element cannot be dissolved in water at all. so methyl mercury is the answer.
It means a chemical/ substance, that cannot be dissolved in a liquid. An example would be starch and water, as starch is insolute when added to water.
Unless it is "deionized water" fresh water will contain dissolved minerals. Both magnesium and silicon are likely to be in those dissolved minerals, but I cannot state with certainty if a given water sample contains them unless it has been chemically analyzed.