Silver (Ag) does not dissolve in hydroxide (OH) solutions. While silver can form complexes with certain ligands, it is generally considered insoluble in most basic solutions, including those containing hydroxide ions. Instead, silver typically forms precipitates, such as silver hydroxide (AgOH), in the presence of hydroxide.
slightly
slightly
It actually reacts with AgCl to produce NaCl (which is soluble), and some Na3[Ag(S2O3)2]complexes which are also soluble in water.
If you mean is it soluble in water then the answer is no.
Barium hydroxide IS soluble in water, and it has the formula Ba(OH)2, not ba(oh)2.
Silver phosphate is not soluble in water.
Yes, Pb(OH)2 is sparingly soluble in water.
Zinc hydroxide is very low soluble in water.
Slightly in water
Rule 4
The chemical formula AgOH corresponds to silver hydroxide. Silver hydroxide is a chemical compound composed of one silver ion (Ag+) and one hydroxide ion (OH-).
NH3 forms a complex ion with silver called the diamine silver ion, Ag(NH3)2+ which has different properties from an ordinary silver ion (Ag+) among them being that more of its compounds are water soluble.