Funny example! Wet laundry is a heterogeneous mixture, because if you have a big pile of wet laundry, it's not "even" all the way through. You can see the different things within the mixture with your eyes. A sock here, a shirt there. A mixture that's "smooth" all the way through (like milk, or creamy peanut butter) is a homogeneous mixture.
chemistry is pants
No, a homogeneous one is.
the laundry was still wet even after jill hung it up in the garden for hours
a wet fart
False. As an example wet sand is a mixture of water and sand, but it is not a solution as the two substances remain as distinct phases.
Sometimes, when you do laundry, you don't dry clothes properly. They are slightly wet and you may not even notice it. When after that you store such clothes in your cabinet or in the closet without air conditioning, they become moldy. If you want to prevent molding on your clothes, check them after laundry, they must be completely dry.
i would say yes because when it is wet it cant be separted and wen dry you can pick out the rocks
YES! Sand is a mixture. Sand is classified as a heterogeneous mixture because it does not have the same properties, composition, and appearance throughout the mixture. A homogeneous mixture has a uniform mix throughout.
False. By definition, a solution is a homogeneous mixture, that is to say, everywhere in it its properties are the same (one phase only). An example is a non saturated mixture of salt and water.The opposite is a heterogeneous mixture, where there are regions (phases) of different characteristics. An example is a mixture of oil and water.
Mixture
yes
the laundry was still wet even after jill hung it up in the garden for hours
get it wet, and rub it on spots instead of a pretreater. Or, shred it and use it in place of laundry detergent
get it wet, and rub it on spots instead of a pretreater. Or, shred it and use it in place of laundry detergent
A wringer is a device for drying laundry, consisting of two rollers between which the wet laundry is squeezed.
No, it is a physical process - water evaporation.
a wet fart
yep.
...wet sand...?