Brine.
In your example, the salt is the solute while the water is the solvent.
salinty
Salt dissolved in water is known as a saline solution.
The pure water is the solvent and the minerals, salts that dissolved in the water (to make salt water) are called the solute. I assumed you were talking about sea/salt water? If you are talking about common salt dissolved in water the the salt is the solute and the water is the solvent.
Salt
It's called an electrolyte
Salt is the solute (the substance being dissolved) and water is the solvent (the substance doing the dissolving.
Some water is called salt water because it has salt (mostly sodium chloride) dissolved in it.
This a saline water (brine).
Salt dissolved in water is a solution, not a mixture. The result is called a saline solution.
I think you mean solvent. A substance that dissolves another substance is called the solvent. Water is a solvent for sugar and salt, for example. The stuff that is dissolved in the solvent is called the solute.
Salt dissolved in water is known as a saline solution.
no salt is not a liquid but salt can be dissolved in liquid water which is then called an aqueous solution.
It is called a solute, which is dissolved in a solvent
The total amount of dissolved salts in ocean water is referred to as "Salinity". :)
The meaning is that the ocean water is saline.
salt when dissolved in water will become an acidic solution
The pure water is the solvent and the minerals, salts that dissolved in the water (to make salt water) are called the solute. I assumed you were talking about sea/salt water? If you are talking about common salt dissolved in water the the salt is the solute and the water is the solvent.
Yes: Solvent is the thing it dissolves into (eg. water) Solute is the thing being dissolved (eg. salt) Solution is what is create (the salt dissolved in water makes a salt solution)