Aqueous isn't a "state". Oxygen is a very, very pale blue in the liquid state; could that be what you're thinking of?
Copper(II) sulfate (CuSO4) in aqueous solution typically appears as a blue-colored solution.
It creates a clear aqueous solution with a blue tint.
Form an aqueous solution
Dissolved in water.
Urine is an excretory product secreted in the form of a liquid. It is basically a homogeneous mixture. It consists of various components which are in the same physical state as an aqueous solution.
Blue in Base
aqueous blue
An aqueous solution of borax will have a slightly basic pH. Litmus is a pH indicator that turns blue in basic solutions and red in acidic solutions. Therefore, when litmus is added to an aqueous solution of borax, it will likely turn blue.
One example of a substance that conducts electricity in its aqueous state but not in its solid state is sulfuric acid. In its aqueous state, sulfuric acid ionizes into ions that are able to carry an electric current, whereas in its solid state it does not have the mobility of ions to conduct electricity.
Aqueous
The aqueous state refers to a substance that is dissolved or suspended in water. It is commonly used to describe solutions or mixtures where water is the solvent.
The state of silver at room temperature is a solid.