Want this question answered?
A substance is 'insoluble in water' if it will not dissolve in water, although it may dissolve in another solvent.
A substance that does not dissolve is insoluble.
A hydrophilic substance will dissolve in water. A hydroPHOBIC substance will not.
Insoluble (the property of insolubility).
The "solute" is the substance you are trying to dissolve. The solvent is the substance you are trying to dissolve it in.
Solvent
"insoluble"
insoluble
A substance is 'insoluble in water' if it will not dissolve in water, although it may dissolve in another solvent.
tone
The water dissolve
The word for that substance is SOLUTE. The term "soluble" describes the action, but is not the term used for the substance.
A substance that does not dissolve is insoluble.
Easy: reactivity
Maybe the best word is 'Oil'
A hydrophilic substance will dissolve in water. A hydroPHOBIC substance will not.
The correct spelling is "solubility," which refers to the ability of a substance to dissolve in a solvent like water.