Your question is not clear; some solids have a great solubility, another are practically insoluble. The solubility depends on the nature of solvent, the nature of the solute, polarity of the molecules, pressure, temperature, the presence of other substances in the solution.
Not all solids dissolve faster in acids.
Water is a solvent, because some solids will dissolve in it.
For example polar liquids dissolve polar solids, nonpolar liquids dissolve nonpolar solids.
no
Not all the solids will dissolve in water. Different solids have different solubilities (some will dissolve more than others). The higher temperature, the more will dissolve
Of course! However, note that solids will dissolve in liquid.
Not all solids dissolve faster in acids.
Water is a solvent, because some solids will dissolve in it.
Insoluble solids are solids that do not dissolve in water.
For example polar liquids dissolve polar solids, nonpolar liquids dissolve nonpolar solids.
Surger, salt, hard candy, and a horses Salt Lick will dissolve.
All solids can dissolve, it just depends on the temperature and solution to which it will be dissolved in.
no
Not all solids will dissolve in water at all. Those that do dissolve do so at different rates, and it's also temperature-dependent.
No, not at all. In fact most solids are INsoluble. Some solids (such as metals, stones, wood) don't dissolve while other solids like sugar or salt do dissolve. Water is a polar molecule, therefore it can dissolve only polar substances and many ionic compounds. However, it cannot dissolve non-polar substances.
Not all solids will dissolve in water at all. Those that do dissolve do so at different rates, and it's also temperature-dependent.
I dont know