Salts are dissociated in ions (cations and anions):
Example:
NaCl------------------------Na+ + Cl-
They don't dissolve (or more properly, dissociate) completely in water, only partially. Acids or bases that dissociate completely are called strong acids or bases.
electrolytes
They are soluble substances, which would include polar substances and ionic compounds.
A. is the answer because electrolytes are salts that dissolved in water and dissociate into charged particles called ions.
In a solution the components that dissolve other components(usually components present in larger amount) are called solvent. The components of the solution which gets dissolved in in the solvent (usually present in lesser amount) is called solute.
something that can be dissolve in liquid is called soluble. if the solute can dissolve in the solvent, it is called a solution
something that can be dissolve in liquid is called soluble. if the solute can dissolve in the solvent, it is called a solution
Electrolytes, because they can conduct an electrical current.
Hydrogen containing covalent bonds interact with water strongly enough that their molecules dissociate into ions. In aqueous solutions, they are called acids. Examples are Hydrochloric acid (HCl), Nitric acid (HNO3), and Sulfuric acid (H2SO4).
Bad stress is technically called "Distress". Good stress is technically called "Eustress".
Substances that do not dissolve are insolubles, because they are not soluble they do not dissolve.
It is the other way round - it's the vector that has components.In general, a vector can have one or more components - though a vector with a single component is often called a "scalar" instead - but technically, a scalar is a special case of a vector.