But you may be looking for their scientific name, such as 'dihydrogen oxide', sucrose, and sodium chloride; for the examples given.
A mixture of water and sugar would contain the chemical compounds H2O (water) and C12H22O11 (sugar), which is commonly known as sucrose.
Water is the most common compound in sea water
Compounds that readily dissociate in water are known as electrolytes, which typically include ionic compounds such as salts. When dissolved in water, these compounds break apart into their constituent ions, allowing them to conduct electricity. Common examples include sodium chloride (table salt) and potassium nitrate. Non-electrolytes, like sugar, do not dissociate into ions and therefore do not conduct electricity in solution.
cake
... The solute is sugar or the tea mix, the solvent is the water.
Sugar, water, and oil are some VERY common compounds.
Water, quartz, rust, and sugar are all common, important compounds containing oxygen.
Water, quartz, rust, and sugar are all common, important compounds containing oxygen.
No. While sugar and water on their own are compounds, when put together they are a mixture
Sugar and water are chemical compounds, homogeneous materials, not mixtures.
Sugar and water are chemical compounds, homogeneous materials, not mixtures.
salt water sugar
Sugar and water both are ionic compounds. Due to this sugar dissolve into water further sugar molecules breaks into small molecules in presence of water molecules.
A mixture of water and sugar would contain the chemical compounds H2O (water) and C12H22O11 (sugar), which is commonly known as sucrose.
salt or water
a mixture, sugar is dissolved within the tea after you mixed it
Sugar, water, salt, alcohol, etc.