the solvent the solute is the substance being dissolved and the solvent is the substance (liquid) the solute dissolves in ie: adding sweet 'n' low to iced tea, the solute is the sweet 'n' low and the solvent is the iced tea
It depends which alcohol. If you are talking about the stuff you drink in beer etc., it is a liquid already, but it mixes freely with water (as in beer!) and quite a few organic solvents.
Alcohol is polar,so polar substances would dissolve in it.eg water.
A solvent
no
It means the solution dissolves into something else partially
Dissolving a substance does not involve a phase change.
A solvent is a substance that dissolves the solute in a solution. For example, in salt water, water is the solvent and the salt is the solute. Water dissolves the salt.
I think it means that it dissolves when in water long enough.
The solvent dissolves the solute. (The solute dissolves in the solvent.)
something that dissolves
Anything that dissolves something else.
What_factors_affect_the_rate_of_dissolving
if it dissolves its a compound if not its an element.
Seltzer
something
the real answer is DISSOLVES dont belive anyone else -_-
It depends on the other substance that you are using. A solute is something that dissolves in something else. A solvent is something that other substances dissolve in For example: Salt dissolves in water Water is the solvent Salt is the solute
Water is considered a quasi-universal solvent.
I think it means that it dissolves when in water long enough.
It means the solution dissolves into something else partially
In the chemical sense, it means something that dissolves something else. In the financial sense, it means basically "has money."