It's the solute.
Water is the solvent, and sugar is the solute.
The sugar is the solute and the water is the solvent. Whatever is dissolved is the solute, and whatever the solute is dissolved in is the solvent. The solvent dissolves the solute.
solution ------- Sugar dissolved in water: sugar is the solute, water is the solvent; and the solute plus the solvent - is a solution !
Water is the solvent and sugar is the solute. The solute is the substance that is being dissolved. The solvent is the substance that the solute is being dissolved into.
In a solution of sugar dissolved in water, water is actually the solvent. The substance that is present in a larger amount and does the dissolving is typically considered the solvent, while the substance that is dissolved is the solute. Sugar is the solute in this case since it is being dissolved in water.
In a solution of sugar and water, water is the solvent and sugar is the solute. The solvent is the substance that dissolves the solute, while the solute is the substance that is being dissolved.
sugar is solute, water is solvent, sugar+water=Solution
The solute. Solutions are formed when one substance (the solute) is dissolved into another (the solvent). For example, when a spoonful of sugar is dissolved in water, the sugar is the solute and the water is the solvent.
No, sugar is the solute. The water is the solvent.Sugar is the solute, (the thing being dissolved) and the water is the solvent, (the thing that the solute is being dissolved in)
Hey whoever asked this question! Well, sugar is actually a solute and water is a solvent! Hopes that this answers your question. BTW: Nice question!~From, unknown!
sugar is the solute of the solution, as we all know that when we dissolved sugar and water, sugar is the solute and the water is the solvent..
Because sugar is dissolved in water !