sand
Solubility: The ability of one substance to dissolve in another at a given temperature and pressure
Yes and no it depends on what the powder is, water will dissolve salt sugar and other powder like them but will not dissolve most other things, it usually only lets in things that can make a hydrogen bond.
Both (table) salt and sugar are soluble in water.
When someone says that sugar is soluble, it means that it can dissolve in a solution, such as water.
Sugar is soluble in water forming a sugar solution. The sugar would be the solute. The water would be the solvent.
A soluble substance is a substance that can dissolve in another substance.
The substance that is not soluble in water is sand. Salt, sugar, and powdered drink mix are all soluble in water and will dissolve when mixed with it.
Sugar can substance soluble in water.
Example of a soluble substance would be sugar and salt, both are easily soluble in the universal solvent, water
baking powder is an insoluble solid and sugar is soluble solid!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
it has a great soluble property
A substance that dissolves readily in water is called "water soluble"
it is salt sugar powder and soup
It dissolves in water.
SodiumClorineIroncalciumMagnesiumsulfuriodine
Solubility: The ability of one substance to dissolve in another at a given temperature and pressure
the substance can disslove in water (h2o) are most POWDER. Additional answer A powder is no more or no less able to dissolve in water than if that substance were NOT a powder. Powdering something does not help to make it soluble, though it might make it dissolve more quickly if it's able to dissolve at all. Some substances that dissolve to some extent are salt, sugar, calciul sulphate, copper chloride - millions of things