Water does not dissolve everything. Some substances dont mix with water. Those are hydrophobic substances, ex: oil molecules
No. Flour does not dissolve with water. So they do not form a solution.
Yes. Water is the best solvent known. Given enough time water will dissolve anything. Water seeks its own level and will travel downhill until it settles at the lowest spot it can reach.
Every 100 grams (100 millilitres) of boiling water (even hard water) will dissolve a maximum of about 40 grams of salt, so anything in excess of that amount just will not dissolve. If your poured a teaspoon of salt grains into a pan of boiling water it would dissolve immediately - almost no time at all.
Yes, It Does Dissolve in water.
mixture dissolve in a water
Many things do not dissolve in water. It all depends on an items chemical makeup. For a very basic example, rocks, obviously, do not dissolve in water, so no: not anything can dissolve in water. If something has not dissolved, it can also not evaporate.
Dissolve
ANSWER:Yes. Everything dissolves in water. If the water is purified, it will dissolve almost anything. Water, in its purest form will dissolve rocks and minerals. peace up yo roxxon
No. Flour does not dissolve with water. So they do not form a solution.
Because of its Universal Solvent
Butterflies indeed eat water. They also eat anything that can dissolve in water :)
Yes; water will dissolve almost anything given enough time.
Salt Water
Substances that do not dissolve in water are called "insoluble" or "non-soluble." For water (a polar molecule), anything non-polar will not dissolve, including hexane, methane, ethane, propane, octane, oils, waxes, and plastics.
Yes, water is a very good solvent but not universal.
Vinegar will dissolve the egg shell. Salt water will not do anything.
Water can dissolve almost anything (eventually over time)