Yes, French dressing is a homogenous mixture made by combining oil, vinegar, and various seasonings or flavorings. It does not contain separate or distinct layers of ingredients.
French dressing does not have a chemical formula because it is not a chemical. It is a mixture made of different components like vinegar, olive oil, etc. that have their own chemical formulas.
Gasoline is a homogenous mixture of hydrocarbons, meaning it is a homogeneous substance.
Urine is not considered to be a mixture, it is actually a solution. However, it is, indeed, a homogenous solution.
Garlic salt is a homogeneous mixture because it consists of two or more substances that are evenly distributed throughout.
another name is 'same kind' or alloy if it is 2 metals or a solution for heterogeneous, 'different kind', or a mechanical mixture
Nope. Its not a homogenous mixture. Homogenous mixtures are uniform throughout, and the parts do not separate from each other. Have you ever looked at Italian dressing (which has vinega and oil in it) after you let it sit in your fridge for any length of time? You can see the oil separate from the rest of the dressing.
No, ranch salad dressing is a mixture composed of various ingredients like buttermilk, herbs, and spices. In chemistry, a solution refers to a homogenous mixture where one or more substances are dissolved in another.
An element is a primary constituent of matter and would appear on the periodic table. French dressing does not appear on the periodic table and is therefore not an element. A compound is a substance formed when two or more elements are chemically bonded together. French dressing is not the chemical bonding of two or more elements. This leaves mixture and this is what french dressing is
No it is not homogenous
It's a homogenous.
It is a homogenous mixture
homogenous mixture
depends if its homogenous or not
No, an element is not a mixture.
Homogenous
yes
No it is a heterogeneous mixture, I believe