heterogeneous
Homogeneous
Raw milk is a heterogeneous mixture because it contains different types of substances (such as water, fat, protein, and minerals) that are not uniformly distributed throughout the sample.
Rule of thumb to use, is if it can settle to the bottom of if it or you have to shake it; it is deffinitly heterogeneous.
Typically kitty litter is not consistant throughout due to added odor eaters, so I would say it is heterogeneous.
Heterogeneous means non-uniform, so mango is arguably heterogeneous; you have the skin, pulp, seed etc. in a mixture, although it is stretching the interpretation of "mixture" when it would be more conventional to consider a single skin, a single seed (mangos have only one seed) and one continuous piece of pulp as discrete parts. The question also ask about "mango", not " a mango" - which implies it is not about a whole fruit. (Many homogeneous mixtures are easily separated - a mixture of powdered sugar and chalk, or a bag of green and red marbles, for instance. Although, again, it depends on what level you are considering the "mixture").
Homogeneous
Raw milk is a heterogeneous mixture because it contains different types of substances (such as water, fat, protein, and minerals) that are not uniformly distributed throughout the sample.
Rule of thumb to use, is if it can settle to the bottom of if it or you have to shake it; it is deffinitly heterogeneous.
i dont know tanong mo sa bolbol mo
hetergeneous
A flower is a heterogeneous mixture.
Typically kitty litter is not consistant throughout due to added odor eaters, so I would say it is heterogeneous.
Heterogeneous mixture.
heterogeneous mixture
Sand+salt: a heterogeneous mixture.
Heterogenous
Heterogeneous means non-uniform, so mango is arguably heterogeneous; you have the skin, pulp, seed etc. in a mixture, although it is stretching the interpretation of "mixture" when it would be more conventional to consider a single skin, a single seed (mangos have only one seed) and one continuous piece of pulp as discrete parts. The question also ask about "mango", not " a mango" - which implies it is not about a whole fruit. (Many homogeneous mixtures are easily separated - a mixture of powdered sugar and chalk, or a bag of green and red marbles, for instance. Although, again, it depends on what level you are considering the "mixture").