I WILL NOT EVER TOLERATE HOMOPHOBIA IN ANY CIRCUMSTANCE!!!
My dear son Charlie, bless his sweet British heart, was set to marry Margaret of Bakewell since he just a wee boy. However, after relocating to Ireland, he found the love of his life. Scott of Dublin. I was not surprised, as my Charlie had been more fond of Prince William rather than Princess Kate. I still love him, although Scott has many questionable piercings.
Hope this finds you well xx
A mixture like saltwater (Sodium Chloride) is said to be homogeneous because the dissolved particles are not visible. Properties of Sodium Chloride include a greater density then freshwater thus making it easier for objects to float on its interface as well as having a salty flavour.
The mixture water-ethanol is homogeneous.
Alcohol and water form a homogeneous mixture.
Sugar (sucrose) dissolves completely in water, making a homogeneous solution.
The role of the water is to be distilled. A better question would be what the other stuff is doing there.
Yes, this solution is homogeneous.
NaCl (sodium chloride) is a compound, not a mixture.
its a homogeneous mixture
Yes, this solution is a homogeneous mixture.
The water solution of sodium chloride is a homogeneous mixture.
A mixture like saltwater (Sodium Chloride) is said to be homogeneous because the dissolved particles are not visible. Properties of Sodium Chloride include a greater density then freshwater thus making it easier for objects to float on its interface as well as having a salty flavour.
Sodium chloride is easy soluble in water; the solution is a homogeneous mixture.
Distilled water is usually a pure substance. Occasionally it contains a very small amount of chloride ions, and then it is an homogeneous mixture.
A homogeneous mixture.
NaCl is a compound known as the table salt.
Lithium chloride is a chemical compound with the formula LiCl. The salt is a typical ionic compound, although the small size of the Li+ ion gives rise to properties not seen for other alkali metal chlorides, such as extraordinary solubility in polar solvents (83g/100 mL of water at 20 °C) and its hygroscopic properties
Yes. It's a mixture of water, common salt (sodium chloride) and other salts like magnesium chloride, magnesium bromide, potassium chloride, calcium sulphate and so on