Sugar is a carbohydrate from plant sources. Minerals may be present in plants but are not plants.
As for is it solvable i think you mean soluble and it is soluble in water
hope it helped
No. It is a carbohydrate. Salt would be an example of a mineral.
By definition, a mineral is a solid inorganic substance of natural occurrence. Cane sugar is an organic substance, derived from sugarcane (a plant). It is sucrose: a disaccharide, formed organically from two monosaccharides - glucose and fructose. Therefore, cane sugar, as well as any other type of sugar, does not meet the definition of a mineral.
Yes, a crystal can be a mineral. Crystal, or crystaline refers to the arrangement of particular atoms or molecules of a mineral or element which generates a crystal lattice. Hence, crystal is a term which describes the effect of the arrangement of molecules of a mineral, element, etc.
yes it is a mineral
is a mineral
Sugar is not a mineral
The puzzle was easily solvable.
no
Pure mineral water does no contain any sugar.
Pure mineral water does no contain any sugar.
Salt is a mineral. Sugar is an organic compound (carbohydrate).
None. Mineral water doesn't have sugar.
No. It is a carbohydrate. Salt would be an example of a mineral.
I can give you several example sentences.That problem is just not solvable.I think that's a solvable situation if we work together.Is the math problem solvable?
No, it is a plant
Sugar is not a mineral, and technically gold is an element.
Sugar is grown from the sugar cane plant. It grows =D