Saline solution
salt
Evaporate the water, leaving the salt behind.
salt when dissolved in water will become an acidic solution
An example of a liquid with water is saltwater, which is a mixture of water and salt dissolved in it.
One example of a dissolved solid is salt (sodium chloride). When salt is added to water, it dissolves and forms a homogeneous solution where the salt particles are dispersed evenly throughout the water.
"Table salt" (or edible salt, common salt, rock salt, halite) or "brine" if it is dissolved in water.
No, a salt is a compound. A salt maybe dissolved in water and made into a solution but as salt is not a solution per se.
When salt is dissolved in water, it is in a dissolved state where the salt particles break apart into ions. This creates a solution where the salt ions are surrounded by water molecules.
Brine.In your example, the salt is the solute while the water is the solvent.
Salt dissolved in water has no appearance. Take a glass of water, sprinkle a little salt in it, stir. Salt disappears when dissolved.
When salt is dissolved a water sodium chloride solution is obtained.
The separated salt is a crystalline solid; the dissolved salt is dissociated in ions.