Sodium chloride is chemical compound, not a mixture.
If you think to salt as a condiment: salt mixed with pepper, salt with dried powdered celery, salt with dried powdered onion etc.
For example brine is a mixture of salt and water.
This is the urine.
salt and ice are the freezing mixtures of ice.
salt water.
no, table sugar and salt are compounds.
what kind of mixtures? mixing salt and sugar? salt and sand? but if you're a middle school chemistry student, then the answer ought to be yes.
Some homogeneous mixtures include salt water, air, and gasoline.
yes it is a solution, and all solutions are mixtures, but all mixtures are not solutions.
NaCl, KCl
They are examples of mixtures.
Both are mixtures
Homogeneous mixtures are mixtures which get completely mixed in the solution. For example, a solution of salt and water. Heterogeneous mixtures are mixtures which do not get completely mixed in the solution. For example, a solution of sand and water.
homogenous mixtures and a simpler ansewer is a compound
Homogeneous mixtures and Heterogeneous mixtures. Homogeneous mixtures are those mixtures whose composition is same throughout i.e., the different components cannot be observed. The mix completely. for example, in true solutions like salt or sugar solution you cannot see the sugar or salt after mixing. They are completely mixed. Also, one spoon of that solution will have the same composition as 2 spoons of the same solution. Heterogeneous mixtures on the other hand, do not have the same composition. They do not mix thoroughly and hence the different components can be observed. For example, when you mix salt and sugar or salt and sand, you can make out which is salt and which is the other substance.